Audit 27680

FY End
2022-06-30
Total Expended
$3.17M
Findings
8
Programs
13
Organization: Urbana City School District (OH)
Year: 2022 Accepted: 2023-05-04

Organization Exclusion Status:

Checking exclusion status...

Findings

ID Ref Severity Repeat Requirement
26365 2022-002 Material Weakness - L
26366 2022-002 Material Weakness - L
26367 2022-002 Material Weakness - L
26368 2022-002 - - L
602807 2022-002 Material Weakness - L
602808 2022-002 Material Weakness - L
602809 2022-002 Material Weakness - L
602810 2022-002 - - L

Contacts

Name Title Type
D2KKMKLAHXK9 Amanda Hildebrand Auditee
9376533845 Donna Waldron Auditor
No contacts on file

Notes to SEFA

Title: NOTE D - SUBRECIPIENTS Accounting Policies: NOTE A - BASIS OF PRESENTATION - The accompanying Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards (the Schedule) includes the federal award activity of Urbana City School District (the District) under programs of the federal government for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022. The information on this Schedule is prepared in accordance with the requirements of Title 2 U.S. Code of Federal Regulations Part 200, Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (Uniform Guidance). Because the Schedule presents only a selected portion of the operations of the District, it is not intended to and does not present the financial position or change in net position of the District. NOTE B - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES - Expenditures reported on the Schedule are reported on the cash basis of accounting. Such expenditures are recognized following the cost principles contained in Uniform Guidance wherein certain types of expenditures may or may not be allowable or may be limited as to reimbursement. De Minimis Rate Used: N Rate Explanation: NOTE C - INDIRECT COST RATE - The District has elected not to use the 10-percent de minimis indirect cost rate as allowed under the Uniform Guidance. The District did not provide funds to subrecipients during the fiscal year.
Title: NOTE E - CHILD NUTRITION CLUSTER Accounting Policies: NOTE A - BASIS OF PRESENTATION - The accompanying Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards (the Schedule) includes the federal award activity of Urbana City School District (the District) under programs of the federal government for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022. The information on this Schedule is prepared in accordance with the requirements of Title 2 U.S. Code of Federal Regulations Part 200, Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (Uniform Guidance). Because the Schedule presents only a selected portion of the operations of the District, it is not intended to and does not present the financial position or change in net position of the District. NOTE B - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES - Expenditures reported on the Schedule are reported on the cash basis of accounting. Such expenditures are recognized following the cost principles contained in Uniform Guidance wherein certain types of expenditures may or may not be allowable or may be limited as to reimbursement. De Minimis Rate Used: N Rate Explanation: NOTE C - INDIRECT COST RATE - The District has elected not to use the 10-percent de minimis indirect cost rate as allowed under the Uniform Guidance. The District commingles cash receipts from the U.S. Department of Agriculture with similar State grants. When reporting expenditures on this Schedule, the District assumes it expends federal monies first.
Title: NOTE F - FOOD DONATION PROGRAM Accounting Policies: NOTE A - BASIS OF PRESENTATION - The accompanying Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards (the Schedule) includes the federal award activity of Urbana City School District (the District) under programs of the federal government for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022. The information on this Schedule is prepared in accordance with the requirements of Title 2 U.S. Code of Federal Regulations Part 200, Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (Uniform Guidance). Because the Schedule presents only a selected portion of the operations of the District, it is not intended to and does not present the financial position or change in net position of the District. NOTE B - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES - Expenditures reported on the Schedule are reported on the cash basis of accounting. Such expenditures are recognized following the cost principles contained in Uniform Guidance wherein certain types of expenditures may or may not be allowable or may be limited as to reimbursement. De Minimis Rate Used: N Rate Explanation: NOTE C - INDIRECT COST RATE - The District has elected not to use the 10-percent de minimis indirect cost rate as allowed under the Uniform Guidance. The District reports commodities consumed on the Schedule at the entitlement value. The District allocated donated food commodities to the program that benefitted from the use of those donated food commodities.
Title: NOTE G - TRANSFERS BETWEEN PROGRAM YEARS Accounting Policies: NOTE A - BASIS OF PRESENTATION - The accompanying Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards (the Schedule) includes the federal award activity of Urbana City School District (the District) under programs of the federal government for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2022. The information on this Schedule is prepared in accordance with the requirements of Title 2 U.S. Code of Federal Regulations Part 200, Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (Uniform Guidance). Because the Schedule presents only a selected portion of the operations of the District, it is not intended to and does not present the financial position or change in net position of the District. NOTE B - SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES - Expenditures reported on the Schedule are reported on the cash basis of accounting. Such expenditures are recognized following the cost principles contained in Uniform Guidance wherein certain types of expenditures may or may not be allowable or may be limited as to reimbursement. De Minimis Rate Used: N Rate Explanation: NOTE C - INDIRECT COST RATE - The District has elected not to use the 10-percent de minimis indirect cost rate as allowed under the Uniform Guidance. Federal regulations require schools to obligate certain federal awards by June 30. However, with Ohio Department of Educations consent, schools can transfer unobligated amounts to the subsequent fiscal years program. The District transferred the following amounts from 2022 to 2023 programs: Program TitleAssistance Listing NumberAmount TransferredTitle I Grants to Local Educational Agencies84.010 $ 161,925Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies (Supplemental School Improvement)84.010 184,800Supporting Effective Instruction State Grants (formerly Improving Teacher Quality State Grants)84.367 157,701Student Support and Academic Enrichment Program84.424 15,083Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies (Expanding Opportunities for Each Child Non-Competitive Grant)84.010 26,050COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund (ESSER II)84.425D 661,538COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund (ARP ESSER)84.425U 3,797,845COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund (ARP Homeless) 84.425W 40,071

Finding Details

2 CFR ? 400 gives regulatory effect to the Department of Agriculture for 2 CFR ? 200.305(b) which requires that for non-Federal entities other than states, payments methods must minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement by the non-Federal entity whether the payment is made by electronic funds transfer, or issuance or redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means. 2 CFR ? 200.305(b)(3) states reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in this paragraph (b) cannot be met, when the Federal awarding agency sets a specific condition per ?200.208, or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement. 7 CFR ? 210 relates to the implementation of the National School Lunch Program where the Department provides States with general and special cash assistance and donations of foods acquired by the Department to be used to assist schools in serving nutritious lunches to children each school day. 7 CFR ? 210.7(c) states to be entitled to reimbursement under this part, each school food authority shall ensure that Claims for Reimbursement are limited to the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements that are served to children eligible for free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements, respectively, for each day of operation. Claims for reimbursement should be based on lunch counts, taken daily at the point of service, which correctly identify the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches served to eligible children. Each school food authority should correctly record, consolidate, and report those lunch and supplement counts on the Claim for Reimbursement. The District completed the required site claim forms; however, due to lack of controls over review of the forms for accuracy, the January 2022 site claim form was overstated by 15 meals. The site claim form was used for federal reimbursement to the District and thus resulted in more reimbursements ($68) than the District was entitled to based on free, reduced, and paid lunches. Failure to properly report meals for reimbursement can result in loss of revenue, excess reimbursements, and/or federal questioned costs. The District should establish and implement procedures to verify the accuracy of reimbursement site claim forms.
2 CFR ? 400 gives regulatory effect to the Department of Agriculture for 2 CFR ? 200.305(b) which requires that for non-Federal entities other than states, payments methods must minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement by the non-Federal entity whether the payment is made by electronic funds transfer, or issuance or redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means. 2 CFR ? 200.305(b)(3) states reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in this paragraph (b) cannot be met, when the Federal awarding agency sets a specific condition per ?200.208, or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement. 7 CFR ? 210 relates to the implementation of the National School Lunch Program where the Department provides States with general and special cash assistance and donations of foods acquired by the Department to be used to assist schools in serving nutritious lunches to children each school day. 7 CFR ? 210.7(c) states to be entitled to reimbursement under this part, each school food authority shall ensure that Claims for Reimbursement are limited to the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements that are served to children eligible for free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements, respectively, for each day of operation. Claims for reimbursement should be based on lunch counts, taken daily at the point of service, which correctly identify the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches served to eligible children. Each school food authority should correctly record, consolidate, and report those lunch and supplement counts on the Claim for Reimbursement. The District completed the required site claim forms; however, due to lack of controls over review of the forms for accuracy, the January 2022 site claim form was overstated by 15 meals. The site claim form was used for federal reimbursement to the District and thus resulted in more reimbursements ($68) than the District was entitled to based on free, reduced, and paid lunches. Failure to properly report meals for reimbursement can result in loss of revenue, excess reimbursements, and/or federal questioned costs. The District should establish and implement procedures to verify the accuracy of reimbursement site claim forms.
2 CFR ? 400 gives regulatory effect to the Department of Agriculture for 2 CFR ? 200.305(b) which requires that for non-Federal entities other than states, payments methods must minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement by the non-Federal entity whether the payment is made by electronic funds transfer, or issuance or redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means. 2 CFR ? 200.305(b)(3) states reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in this paragraph (b) cannot be met, when the Federal awarding agency sets a specific condition per ?200.208, or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement. 7 CFR ? 210 relates to the implementation of the National School Lunch Program where the Department provides States with general and special cash assistance and donations of foods acquired by the Department to be used to assist schools in serving nutritious lunches to children each school day. 7 CFR ? 210.7(c) states to be entitled to reimbursement under this part, each school food authority shall ensure that Claims for Reimbursement are limited to the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements that are served to children eligible for free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements, respectively, for each day of operation. Claims for reimbursement should be based on lunch counts, taken daily at the point of service, which correctly identify the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches served to eligible children. Each school food authority should correctly record, consolidate, and report those lunch and supplement counts on the Claim for Reimbursement. The District completed the required site claim forms; however, due to lack of controls over review of the forms for accuracy, the January 2022 site claim form was overstated by 15 meals. The site claim form was used for federal reimbursement to the District and thus resulted in more reimbursements ($68) than the District was entitled to based on free, reduced, and paid lunches. Failure to properly report meals for reimbursement can result in loss of revenue, excess reimbursements, and/or federal questioned costs. The District should establish and implement procedures to verify the accuracy of reimbursement site claim forms.
2 CFR ? 400 gives regulatory effect to the Department of Agriculture for 2 CFR ? 200.305(b) which requires that for non-Federal entities other than states, payments methods must minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement by the non-Federal entity whether the payment is made by electronic funds transfer, or issuance or redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means. 2 CFR ? 200.305(b)(3) states reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in this paragraph (b) cannot be met, when the Federal awarding agency sets a specific condition per ?200.208, or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement. 7 CFR ? 210 relates to the implementation of the National School Lunch Program where the Department provides States with general and special cash assistance and donations of foods acquired by the Department to be used to assist schools in serving nutritious lunches to children each school day. 7 CFR ? 210.7(c) states to be entitled to reimbursement under this part, each school food authority shall ensure that Claims for Reimbursement are limited to the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements that are served to children eligible for free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements, respectively, for each day of operation. Claims for reimbursement should be based on lunch counts, taken daily at the point of service, which correctly identify the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches served to eligible children. Each school food authority should correctly record, consolidate, and report those lunch and supplement counts on the Claim for Reimbursement. The District completed the required site claim forms; however, due to lack of controls over review of the forms for accuracy, the January 2022 site claim form was overstated by 15 meals. The site claim form was used for federal reimbursement to the District and thus resulted in more reimbursements ($68) than the District was entitled to based on free, reduced, and paid lunches. Failure to properly report meals for reimbursement can result in loss of revenue, excess reimbursements, and/or federal questioned costs. The District should establish and implement procedures to verify the accuracy of reimbursement site claim forms.
2 CFR ? 400 gives regulatory effect to the Department of Agriculture for 2 CFR ? 200.305(b) which requires that for non-Federal entities other than states, payments methods must minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement by the non-Federal entity whether the payment is made by electronic funds transfer, or issuance or redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means. 2 CFR ? 200.305(b)(3) states reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in this paragraph (b) cannot be met, when the Federal awarding agency sets a specific condition per ?200.208, or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement. 7 CFR ? 210 relates to the implementation of the National School Lunch Program where the Department provides States with general and special cash assistance and donations of foods acquired by the Department to be used to assist schools in serving nutritious lunches to children each school day. 7 CFR ? 210.7(c) states to be entitled to reimbursement under this part, each school food authority shall ensure that Claims for Reimbursement are limited to the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements that are served to children eligible for free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements, respectively, for each day of operation. Claims for reimbursement should be based on lunch counts, taken daily at the point of service, which correctly identify the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches served to eligible children. Each school food authority should correctly record, consolidate, and report those lunch and supplement counts on the Claim for Reimbursement. The District completed the required site claim forms; however, due to lack of controls over review of the forms for accuracy, the January 2022 site claim form was overstated by 15 meals. The site claim form was used for federal reimbursement to the District and thus resulted in more reimbursements ($68) than the District was entitled to based on free, reduced, and paid lunches. Failure to properly report meals for reimbursement can result in loss of revenue, excess reimbursements, and/or federal questioned costs. The District should establish and implement procedures to verify the accuracy of reimbursement site claim forms.
2 CFR ? 400 gives regulatory effect to the Department of Agriculture for 2 CFR ? 200.305(b) which requires that for non-Federal entities other than states, payments methods must minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement by the non-Federal entity whether the payment is made by electronic funds transfer, or issuance or redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means. 2 CFR ? 200.305(b)(3) states reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in this paragraph (b) cannot be met, when the Federal awarding agency sets a specific condition per ?200.208, or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement. 7 CFR ? 210 relates to the implementation of the National School Lunch Program where the Department provides States with general and special cash assistance and donations of foods acquired by the Department to be used to assist schools in serving nutritious lunches to children each school day. 7 CFR ? 210.7(c) states to be entitled to reimbursement under this part, each school food authority shall ensure that Claims for Reimbursement are limited to the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements that are served to children eligible for free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements, respectively, for each day of operation. Claims for reimbursement should be based on lunch counts, taken daily at the point of service, which correctly identify the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches served to eligible children. Each school food authority should correctly record, consolidate, and report those lunch and supplement counts on the Claim for Reimbursement. The District completed the required site claim forms; however, due to lack of controls over review of the forms for accuracy, the January 2022 site claim form was overstated by 15 meals. The site claim form was used for federal reimbursement to the District and thus resulted in more reimbursements ($68) than the District was entitled to based on free, reduced, and paid lunches. Failure to properly report meals for reimbursement can result in loss of revenue, excess reimbursements, and/or federal questioned costs. The District should establish and implement procedures to verify the accuracy of reimbursement site claim forms.
2 CFR ? 400 gives regulatory effect to the Department of Agriculture for 2 CFR ? 200.305(b) which requires that for non-Federal entities other than states, payments methods must minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement by the non-Federal entity whether the payment is made by electronic funds transfer, or issuance or redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means. 2 CFR ? 200.305(b)(3) states reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in this paragraph (b) cannot be met, when the Federal awarding agency sets a specific condition per ?200.208, or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement. 7 CFR ? 210 relates to the implementation of the National School Lunch Program where the Department provides States with general and special cash assistance and donations of foods acquired by the Department to be used to assist schools in serving nutritious lunches to children each school day. 7 CFR ? 210.7(c) states to be entitled to reimbursement under this part, each school food authority shall ensure that Claims for Reimbursement are limited to the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements that are served to children eligible for free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements, respectively, for each day of operation. Claims for reimbursement should be based on lunch counts, taken daily at the point of service, which correctly identify the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches served to eligible children. Each school food authority should correctly record, consolidate, and report those lunch and supplement counts on the Claim for Reimbursement. The District completed the required site claim forms; however, due to lack of controls over review of the forms for accuracy, the January 2022 site claim form was overstated by 15 meals. The site claim form was used for federal reimbursement to the District and thus resulted in more reimbursements ($68) than the District was entitled to based on free, reduced, and paid lunches. Failure to properly report meals for reimbursement can result in loss of revenue, excess reimbursements, and/or federal questioned costs. The District should establish and implement procedures to verify the accuracy of reimbursement site claim forms.
2 CFR ? 400 gives regulatory effect to the Department of Agriculture for 2 CFR ? 200.305(b) which requires that for non-Federal entities other than states, payments methods must minimize the time elapsing between the transfer of funds from the United States Treasury or the pass-through entity and the disbursement by the non-Federal entity whether the payment is made by electronic funds transfer, or issuance or redemption of checks, warrants, or payment by other means. 2 CFR ? 200.305(b)(3) states reimbursement is the preferred method when the requirements in this paragraph (b) cannot be met, when the Federal awarding agency sets a specific condition per ?200.208, or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement or when the non-Federal entity requests payment by reimbursement. 7 CFR ? 210 relates to the implementation of the National School Lunch Program where the Department provides States with general and special cash assistance and donations of foods acquired by the Department to be used to assist schools in serving nutritious lunches to children each school day. 7 CFR ? 210.7(c) states to be entitled to reimbursement under this part, each school food authority shall ensure that Claims for Reimbursement are limited to the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements that are served to children eligible for free, reduced price and paid lunches and meal supplements, respectively, for each day of operation. Claims for reimbursement should be based on lunch counts, taken daily at the point of service, which correctly identify the number of free, reduced price and paid lunches served to eligible children. Each school food authority should correctly record, consolidate, and report those lunch and supplement counts on the Claim for Reimbursement. The District completed the required site claim forms; however, due to lack of controls over review of the forms for accuracy, the January 2022 site claim form was overstated by 15 meals. The site claim form was used for federal reimbursement to the District and thus resulted in more reimbursements ($68) than the District was entitled to based on free, reduced, and paid lunches. Failure to properly report meals for reimbursement can result in loss of revenue, excess reimbursements, and/or federal questioned costs. The District should establish and implement procedures to verify the accuracy of reimbursement site claim forms.