2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023
2023 – 002 INTERNAL CONTROLS OVER DISBURSEMENTS
Significant Deficiency
U.S. DEPARTMENTS OF EDUCATION
Federal Assistance No. 84.425U
COVID-19: ARP - Elementary and Secondary Schools Emergency Relief
Passthrough Agency: New Mexico Public Education Department
Award Period: July 1, 2022 – June 30, 2023
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Condition: During the testing there was an invoice in the amount of $299,271 that was paid of twice during June 2023. The expenditure
was submitted for reimbursement from federal funds. The District was notified by the vendor of the double payment while asking to
use it as credit against a separate invoice.
Criteria: PART 200—UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS, COST PRINCIPLES, AND AUDIT REQUIREMENTS
FOR FEDERAL AWARDS
§ 200.303 Internal controls.
The non-Federal entity must:
(a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal
entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the
Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal
Government” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework”, issued
by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).
(b) Comply with the U.S. Constitution, Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal awards.
(c) Evaluate and monitor the non-Federal entity's compliance with statutes, regulations and the terms and conditions of Federal
awards.
(d) Take prompt action when instances of noncompliance are identified including noncompliance identified in audit findings.
(e) Take reasonable measures to safeguard protected personally identifiable information and other information the Federal
awarding agency or pass-through entity designates as sensitive or the non-Federal entity considers sensitive consistent with
applicable Federal, State, local, and tribal laws regarding privacy and responsibility over confidentiality.
§ 200.403 Factors affecting allowability of costs.
Except where otherwise authorized by statute, costs must meet the following general criteria in order to be allowable under Federal
awards:
(a) Be necessary and reasonable for the performance of the Federal award and be allocable thereto under these principles.
(b) Conform to any limitations or exclusions set forth in these principles or in the Federal award as to types or amount of cost
items.
(c) Be consistent with policies and procedures that apply uniformly to both federally-financed and other activities of the non-
Federal entity.
(d) Be accorded consistent treatment. A cost may not be assigned to a Federal award as a direct cost if any other cost incurred for
the same purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the Federal award as an indirect cost.
(e) Be determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), except, for state and local governments
and Indian tribes only, as otherwise provided for in this part.
(f) Not be included as a cost or used to meet cost sharing or matching requirements of any other federally-financed program in
either the current or a prior period. See also § 200.306(b).
(g) Be adequately documented. See also § 200.300 through 200.309 of this part.
(h) Cost must be incurred during the approved budget period. The Federal awarding agency is authorized, at its discretion, to waive
prior written approvals to carry forward unobligated balances to subsequent budget periods pursuant to § 200.308(e)(3).
Cause: The facilities department submitted the invoice to the finance department for payment at the beginning of June and towards the end
of June. The accounts payable clerk bypassed the system error that the invoice number had been entered previously.
Questioned costs: $299,271 was the amount of the duplicate payment. The expenditure from the duplicate payment was not reported in
the schedule of expenditures in federal awards and was reported as a receivable from the vendor in the financial statements for Fund
24330.
Effect or potential effect: Expenditures could be overstated, as well as revenues, if invoices are paid more than once and then also
reimbursed. As a result, a receivable and unearned income must be recognized.
Recommendation: Training should be given to accounts payable staff regarding the importance system warnings and the need to monitor
invoices form the vendors. A tracking system should be implemented for tracking major projects to ensure than invoices are not
reported more than once. Invoices should be stamped received upon receipt, marked when applied to a major project, and marked
recorded once entered into the accounting system.
Management’s response: Executive Director of Finance: Management agrees with this finding. The school district converted to a new
financial ERP system as of July 1, 2023. The new ERP system flags any duplicate invoice numbers that maybe entered. The Accounts
Payable (A/P) staff will verify if payment has already been made. On occasion, payment requests do not have an invoice number. To
prevent duplicate payments, the Accounts Payable staff require original invoices and uses a system generated invoice number, or a will
use a manual entry numbering convention to prevent duplicate invoice numbers. The invoice data is entered by an Accounts Payable
specialist and reviewed by the Accounts Payable Manager. On occasion, A/P must request corrected invoices from vendors who try
and reuse invoice numbers. The A/P Manager reviews invoice numbers during the check run for accuracy. Purchasing and A/P will
also periodically review the vendor database for duplicate vendors.
For construction projects that list a pay application number instead of an invoice number, A/P will implement a consistent invoice
numbering convention to avoid duplicate payments. The A/P specialists will also review the PO payment history prior to processing.
Responsible party(ies) for corrective action(s): Accounts Payable Manager
Corrective action(s) timeline: December 1, 2023