Audit 324412

FY End
2023-06-30
Total Expended
$92.37M
Findings
108
Programs
21
Year: 2023 Accepted: 2024-10-10

Organization Exclusion Status:

Checking exclusion status...

Findings

ID Ref Severity Repeat Requirement
502372 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502373 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502374 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502375 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502376 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502377 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502378 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502379 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502380 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502381 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502382 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502383 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502384 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502385 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502386 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502387 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502388 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502389 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502390 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502391 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502392 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502393 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502394 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502395 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502396 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
502397 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502398 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502399 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502400 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502401 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502402 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502403 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502404 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502405 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502406 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502407 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502408 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502409 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502410 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502411 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502412 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502413 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502414 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502415 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502416 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502417 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502418 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502419 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502420 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502421 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502422 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502423 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502424 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
502425 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078814 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078815 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078816 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078817 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078818 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078819 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078820 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078821 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078822 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078823 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078824 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078825 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078826 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078827 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078828 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078829 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078830 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078831 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078832 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078833 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078834 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078835 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078836 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078837 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078838 2023-002 Significant Deficiency Yes I
1078839 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078840 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078841 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078842 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078843 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078844 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078845 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078846 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078847 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078848 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078849 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078850 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078851 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078852 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078853 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078854 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078855 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078856 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078857 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078858 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078859 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078860 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078861 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078862 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078863 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078864 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078865 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078866 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L
1078867 2023-003 Significant Deficiency - L

Programs

ALN Program Spent Major Findings
15.512 Central Valley Project Improvement Act, Title Xxxiv $1.59M Yes 0
11.407 Interjurisdictional Fisheries Act of 1986 $1.19M - 0
11.022 Bipartisan Budget Act of 2021 $839,709 Yes 1
11.436 Columbia River Fisheries Development Program $742,334 - 0
11.437 Pacific Fisheries Data Program $553,526 Yes 2
11.438 Pacific Coast Salmon Recovery Pacific Salmon Treaty Program $502,078 - 0
11.477 Fisheries Disaster Relief $304,120 - 0
11.469 Congressionally Identified Awards and Projects Adoption of Electronic Monitoring in Ak $173,339 - 0
11.439 Marine Mammal Data Program $170,137 - 0
15.661 Lower Snake River Compensation Plan $129,748 - 0
11.427 Fisheries Development and Utilization Research and Development Grants and Cooperative Agreements Program $104,670 - 0
15.648 Central Valley Project Improvement Act (cvpia) $103,196 - 0
15.808 U.s. Geological Survey Research and Data Collection Stream Flow Permeance (flowper) and (roadstr) $94,335 - 0
11.472 Unallied Science Program $63,245 - 0
81.999 Bonneville Power Administration - Environment, Fish and Wildlife $61,950 - 0
15.605 Sport Fish Restoration $59,498 - 0
11.454 Covid 19 - Unallied Management Projects $56,028 - 0
15.808 U.s. Geological Survey Research and Data Collection Science, Data Management, Logistical Support $49,693 - 0
66.608 Environmental Information Exchange Network Grant Program and Related Assistance $41,249 - 0
15.608 Fish and Wildlife Management Assistance $26,683 - 0
11.441 Regional Fishery Management Councils $8,078 - 0

Contacts

Name Title Type
N4DSAJYQETA5 Ngu Castro Auditee
5055953229 Caroline Wright Auditor
No contacts on file

Notes to SEFA

Title: BASIS OF PRESENTATION Accounting Policies: Expenditures Expenditures reported on the schedule of expenditures of federal awards (the Schedule) are reported on the accrual basis of accounting. Such expenditures are recognized following the cost principles contained in the Uniform Guidance, wherein certain types of expenditures are not allowable or are limited as to reimbursement. Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission has elected not to use the 10-percent de minimis indirect cost rate as allowed under the Uniform Guidance. Pass-Through Entities Pass-through entity identifying numbers are presented where available. De Minimis Rate Used: N Rate Explanation: Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission has elected not to use the 10-percent de minimis indirect cost rate as allowed under the Uniform Guidance. The accompanying Schedule includes the federal award activity of Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission under programs of the federal government for the year ended June 30, 2023. The information in this Schedule is presented in accordance with the requirements of 2 CFR 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 Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission, it is not intended to and does not present the financial position, changes in net assets, or cash flows of Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission.

Finding Details

Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of procurement. Specifically, §200.318 General procurement standards indicates “the non-Federal entity must maintain records sufficient to detail the history of procurement. These records will include but are not necessarily limited to the following: Rationale for the method of procurement, selection of contract type, contractor selection or rejection, and the basis for the contract price.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: A selection of procurements did not maintain sufficient documentation that detailed the history of the procurement and justification for using non-competitive practices. Questioned costs: Known questioned costs of $23,890. (NA21NMF4370552 = $4,650, NA22NMF4370355 = $12,440, NA22NMF4360330 = $6,800) Context: In a statistically valid sample, three of forty procurement selections tested, did not have sufficient documentation to justify their acquisition method. One item related to purchase decisions dictated by a subrecipient; however the payment was made directly by the Commission and no justification showing an adequate procurement process was provided by the subrecipient. Two selections related to procurements with a long-standing vendor which was used as the justification for selection, however no documentation was provided for the justification to continue using this vendor. Cause: Insufficient understanding and application of procurement policies when unusual situations arise. Effect: Noncompliance could lead the Commission to enter into contracts with vendors that are not the most suitable for the goods and/or services being procured. Repeat finding: Yes – see finding 2022-001 from the prior year. Recommendation: We recommend increased internal monitoring to ensure that noncompetitive procurements are sufficiently justified, and that internal Sole Source Justification Forms are completed correctly and retained for all vendors procured under noncompetitive methods. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.
Criteria or specific requirement: 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Award requires compliance with the provisions of reporting. Specifically, per CFR 200.329(c)(1), “the non-Federal entity must submit performance reports at the interval required by the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity to best inform improvements in program outcome and productivity…. Reports submitted quarterly or semiannual must be due no later than 30 calendar days after the reporting period.” In addition, Uniform Grant Guidance (2 CFR 200.303) requires nonfederal entities receiving Federal awards establish and maintain internal controls designed to reasonably ensure compliance with Federal laws, regulations, and program compliance requirements. Condition: During our testing, we noted some reports tested were not submitted within 30 days after the end of the quarterly reporting period. Questioned costs: None. Context: Two of eight reports tested under ALN 11.437 and two of five reports tested under ALN 11.022 were submitted 1 day after the due date. The ALN 11.437 reports related to the program quarter ended 2/28/2023 and the ALN 11.022 reports related to the program quarter ended 4/30/23. Cause: Reports were likely sent to the Grants Manager on the due date, and therefore were missed or there was not time to adequately review prior to submission by end of day. Effect: The Commission was not in compliance with submitting reports timely. Repeat finding: No Recommendation: We recommend the Commission implement stronger internal monitoring to ensure reports are completed by program managers and submitted to the Grants Manager timely to ensure ample time for internal review and upload to the Federal Agency. Views of responsible officials: There is no disagreement with the audit finding.