Audit 351592

FY End
2024-06-30
Total Expended
$3.44B
Findings
16
Programs
650
Organization: State of South Dakota (SD)
Year: 2024 Accepted: 2025-03-31

Organization Exclusion Status:

Checking exclusion status...

Findings

ID Ref Severity Repeat Requirement
547279 2024-005 Material Weakness Yes A
547280 2024-005 Material Weakness Yes A
547281 2024-006 Significant Deficiency - N
547282 2024-006 Significant Deficiency - N
547283 2024-006 Significant Deficiency - N
547284 2024-006 Significant Deficiency - N
547285 2024-007 Significant Deficiency - M
547286 2024-008 - - A
1123721 2024-005 Material Weakness Yes A
1123722 2024-005 Material Weakness Yes A
1123723 2024-006 Significant Deficiency - N
1123724 2024-006 Significant Deficiency - N
1123725 2024-006 Significant Deficiency - N
1123726 2024-006 Significant Deficiency - N
1123727 2024-007 Significant Deficiency - M
1123728 2024-008 - - A

Programs

ALN Program Spent Major Findings
93.778 Medical Assistance Program $982.80M Yes 1
21.027 Covid-19 Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds $213.64M Yes 0
10.551 Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (note 3e) $178.36M Yes 0
84.425 Covid-19 Education Stabilization Fund - Arp - Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund $145.07M - 0
84.268 Federal Direct Student Loans (note 3h) $121.67M - 0
66.458 Clean Water State Revolving Fund (note 3g) $91.98M - 0
93.778 Covid-19 Medical Assistance Program - 6.2% Ffcra Increase $64.80M Yes 1
84.010 Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies $55.18M - 0
84.027 Special Education Grants to States (idea, Part B) $43.68M - 0
97.036 Disaster Grants - Public Assistance (presidentially Declared Disasters) (note 3o) $39.70M Yes 1
84.425 Covid-19 Education Stabilization Fund - Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund $39.41M - 0
10.555 National School Lunch Program (note 3a) $37.27M - 0
17.225 Unemployment Insurance (note 3k) $36.98M Yes 0
93.767 Children's Health Insurance Program $33.95M - 0
84.063 Federal Pell Grant Program $26.75M - 0
93.575 Covid-19 Child Care and Development Block Grant $24.88M - 0
20.934 Nationally Significant Freight and Highway Projects $24.46M - 0
93.558 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families $21.71M Yes 1
93.323 Covid-19 Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (elc) $20.39M Yes 0
15.611 Wildlife Restoration and Basic Hunter Education and Safety $18.53M - 0
10.557 Wic Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (note 3i) $17.37M - 0
93.268 Immunization Cooperative Agreements $16.50M - 0
93.568 Low-Income Home Energy Assistance $15.71M Yes 0
93.575 Child Care and Development Block Grant $13.79M - 0
93.391 Covid-19 Activities to Support State, Tribal, Local and Territorial (stlt) Health Department Response to Public Health Or Healthcare Crises $13.59M - 0
84.126 Rehabilitation Services Vocational Rehabilitation Grants to States $12.96M - 0
10.561 State Administrative Matching Grants for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program $12.50M Yes 0
12.400 Military Construction, National Guard - Sioux Falls Readiness Center $11.91M Yes 0
66.468 Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (note 3g) $11.71M - 0
20.509 Formula Grants for Rural Areas and Tribal Transit Program $10.99M Yes 0
84.367 Supporting Effective Instruction State Grants (formerly Improving Teacher Quality State Grants) $10.32M - 0
93.342 Health Professions Student Loans, Including Primary Care Loans and Loans for Disadvantaged Students (note 3f) $9.62M - 0
10.553 School Breakfast Program $9.09M - 0
93.659 Adoption Assistance $9.09M - 0
93.658 Foster Care Title IV-E $8.80M - 0
93.959 Block Grants for Prevention and Treatment of Substance Abuse $8.10M - 0
93.563 Child Support Services (note 3n) $8.10M Yes 0
20.933 National Infrastructure Investments $7.53M - 0
10.558 Child and Adult Care Food Program $7.35M - 0
93.568 Low-Income Home Energy Assistance - Supplemental Funding $7.34M Yes 0
81.U01 Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Contract $7.26M Yes 0
93.596 Child Care Mandatory and Matching Funds of the Child Care and Development Fund $7.26M - 0
14.228 Community Development Block Grants/state's Program and Non-Entitlement Grants in Hawaii $6.90M - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects $6.89M - 0
20.526 Buses and Bus Facilities Formula, Competitive, and Low Or No Emissions Programs $6.77M - 0
64.015 Veterans State Nursing Home Care (note 3c) $6.52M - 0
15.605 Sport Fish Restoration $6.42M - 0
10.937 Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities $6.38M - 0
96.001 Social Security Disability Insurance $6.35M - 0
84.048 Career and Technical Education - Basic Grants to States $6.24M - 0
17.207 Employment Service/wagner-Peyser Funded Activities $6.22M - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Arng Real Property Operations and Maintenance $6.16M - 0
21.029 Covid-19 Coronavirus Capital Projects Fund $6.12M Yes 0
84.287 Twenty-First Century Community Learning Centers $6.02M - 0
10.569 Emergency Food Assistance Program (food Commodities) (note 3a) $5.89M - 0
93.069 Public Health Emergency Preparedness $5.59M - 0
66.605 Performance Partnership Grants $5.48M - 0
20.325 Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements $5.19M - 0
16.575 Crime Victim Assistance $4.74M - 0
97.067 Homeland Security Grant Program $4.60M Yes 0
93.155 Covid-19 Rural Health Research Centers - Ship $4.52M Yes 0
93.045 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Iii, Part C, Nutrition Services $4.50M - 0
93.569 Community Services Block Grant $4.45M - 0
93.667 Social Services Block Grant $4.39M - 0
93.959 Covid-19 Block Grants for Prevention and Treatment of Substance Abuse $4.37M - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training - Biomedical Technology - Brin (biomedical Research Infrastructure Network) for South Dakota $4.19M - 0
81.042 Weatherization Assistance for Low-Income Persons $4.08M - 0
84.038 Federal Perkins Loan Program - Federal Capital Contributions (notes 3d and 3f) $4.06M - 0
20.218 Motor Carrier Safety Assistance $3.72M - 0
10.203 Payments to Agricultural Experiment Stations Under the Hatch Act $3.63M - 0
47.083 Integrative Activities $3.60M - 0
97.042 Emergency Management Performance Grants $3.50M - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Ang Fire Protection Activities $3.37M - 0
10.320 Sun Grant Program $3.25M - 0
93.600 Head Start $3.23M - 0
20.600 State and Community Highway Safety $3.17M - 0
93.994 Maternal and Child Health Services Block Grant to the States $3.14M - 0
93.364 Nursing Student Loans (note 3f) $2.91M - 0
11.307 Covid-19 Economic Adjustment Assistance - Travel, Tourism, and Outdoor Recreation $2.78M - 0
15.916 Outdoor Recreation Acquisition, Development and Planning $2.73M - 0
84.369 Grants for State Assessments and Related Activities $2.73M - 0
84.181 Special Education - Grants for Infants and Families $2.68M - 0
10.582 Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program - Administrative Review and Training Method II $2.54M - 0
93.791 Money Follows the Person Rebalancing Demonstration $2.48M - 0
10.698 State & Private Forestry Cooperative Fire Assistance $2.47M - 0
17.258 Wioa Adult Program $2.30M - 0
93.136 Injury Prevention and Control Research and State and Community Based Programs - Sexual Violence Prevention and Education $2.29M - 0
17.259 Wioa Youth Activities $2.23M - 0
66.460 Nonpoint Source Implementation Grants $2.17M - 0
84.033 Federal Work-Study Program $2.16M - 0
12.RD Research and Development $2.14M - 0
93.044 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Iii, Part B, Grants for Supportive Services and Senior Centers $2.04M - 0
97.039 Hazard Mitigation Grant $2.02M - 0
93.958 Block Grants for Community Mental Health Services $1.99M - 0
20.237 Motor Carrier Safety Assistance High Priority Activities Grants and Cooperative Agreements $1.94M - 0
93.898 Cancer Prevention and Control Programs for State, Territorial and Tribal Organizations $1.93M - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Ang Facilities Operations and Maintenance Activities $1.76M - 0
84.007 Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants $1.71M - 0
12.400 Military Construction, National Guard - Transient Training Officer Quarters $1.69M Yes 0
84.002 Adult Education - Basic Grants to States $1.68M - 0
16.554 National Criminal History Improvement Program (nchip) $1.68M - 0
93.323 Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (elc) $1.68M Yes 0
10.559 Summer Food Service Program for Children (note 3a) $1.63M - 0
84.173 Special Education Preschool Grants (idea Preschool) $1.63M - 0
39.003 Donation of Federal Surplus Personal Property (note 3b) $1.57M - 0
97.008 Non-Profit Security Program $1.56M - 0
20.608 Minimum Penalties for Repeat Offenders for Driving While Intoxicated $1.55M - 0
93.777 State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers (title Xviii) Medicare $1.52M Yes 1
10.560 State Administrative Expenses for Child Nutrition $1.51M - 0
90.404 Hava Election Security Grants $1.50M - 0
93.917 Hiv Care Formula Grants - Ryan White Care Act Title II $1.49M - 0
93.958 Covid-19 Block Grants for Community Mental Health Services $1.47M - 0
93.354 Covid-19 Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response $1.45M - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Ang Security Guard Activities $1.39M - 0
93.912 Rural Health Care Services Outreach, Rural Health Network Development and Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement $1.38M - 0
20.509 Covid-19 Formula Grants for Rural Areas and Tribal Transit Program $1.37M Yes 0
93.556 Marylee Allen Promoting Safe and Stable Families Program $1.33M - 0
14.228 Covid-19 Community Development Block Grants/state's Program and Non-Entitlement Grants in Hawaii $1.31M - 0
45.310 Grants to States $1.30M - 0
93.387 National and State Tobacco Control Program $1.26M - 0
93.889 National Bioterrorism Hospital Preparedness Program $1.25M - 0
93.568 Covid-19 Low-Income Home Energy Assistance $1.22M Yes 0
84.425 Covid-19 Education Stabilization Fund - Governor's Emergency Education Relief Fund $1.22M - 0
17.278 Wioa Dislocated Worker Formula Grants $1.22M - 0
10.475 Cooperative Agreements with States for Intrastate Meat and Poultry Inspection $1.20M - 0
93.796 State Survey Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers (title Xix) Medicaid $1.19M - 0
17.285 Registered Apprenticeship $1.18M - 0
93.870 Maternal, Infant and Early Childhood Home Visiting Grant $1.17M - 0
93.110 Maternal and Child Health Federal Consolidated Programs $1.17M - 0
10.665 Schools and Roads - Grants to States $1.12M - 0
17.225 Covid-19 Unemployment Insurance (note 3k) $1.08M Yes 0
84.365 English Language Acquisition State Grants $1.08M - 0
93.053 Nutrition Services Incentive Program $1.06M - 0
12.RD Mil Corporation $1.06M - 0
45.025 Promotion of the Arts Partnership Agreements $1.05M - 0
84.425 Covid-19 Education Stabilization Fund - Emergency Assistance for Non-Public Schools $1.03M - 0
93.940 Hiv Prevention Activities Health Department Based $1.03M - 0
95.001 High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program $1.01M - 0
84.425 Covid-19 Education Stabilization Fund - Arp - Homeless Children and Youth $1.01M - 0
93.674 John H. Chafee Foster Care Program for Successful Transition to Adulthood $981,403 - 0
43.008 Office of Stem Engagement (ostem) - Education $979,218 - 0
20.106 Airport Improvement Program, Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Programs, and Covid-19 Airports Programs (note 3j) $979,116 - 0
93.217 Family Planning Services $969,208 - 0
84.011 Migrant Education State Grant Program $968,875 - 0
93.426 The National Cardiovascular Health Program $962,480 - 0
93.052 National Family Caregiver Support, Title Iii, Part E $953,394 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Arng Security Guard Activities $926,603 - 0
16.741 Dna Backlog Reduction Program $922,025 - 0
97.012 Boating Safety Financial Assistance $921,299 - 0
12.905 Cybersecurity Core Curriculum - Ncae-C Faculty Development $881,643 - 0
11.307 Covid-19 Economic Adjustment Assistance $858,442 - 0
66.817 State and Tribal Response Program Grants $854,923 - 0
16.588 Violence Against Women Formula Grants $843,923 - 0
93.671 Family Violence Prevention and Services/domestic Violence Shelter and Supportive Services $825,962 - 0
93.165 Covid-19 Grants to States for Loan Repayment $806,800 - 0
59.037 Small Business Development Centers $798,109 - 0
93.319 Outreach Programs to Reduce the Prevalence of Obesity in High Risk Rural Areas $788,623 - 0
15.904 Historic Preservation Fund Grants-in-Aid $779,691 - 0
93.268 Covid-19 Immunization Cooperative Agreements $772,087 - 0
84.425 Covid-19 Education Stabilization Fund - Discretionary Grants: Rethink K-12 Education Models Grants $769,751 - 0
17.277 Covid-19 Wioa National Dislocated Worker Grants / Wia National Emergency Grants $765,667 - 0
93.977 Covid-19 Sexually Transmitted Diseases (std) Prevention and Control Grants $761,832 - 0
10.664 Cooperative Forestry Assistance $757,204 - 0
12.RD Rapid Sustainment Office $745,094 - 0
93.241 State Rural Hospital Flexibility Program $743,284 - 0
16.750 Support for Adam Walsh Act Implementation Grant Program $705,318 - 0
93.925 Scholarships for Health Professions Students From Disadvantaged Backgrounds $695,024 - 0
93.967 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Collaboration with Academia to Strengthen Public Health $693,360 - 0
12.020 Starbase Program $677,529 - 0
93.632 University Centers for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities Education, Research, and Service $649,686 - 0
10.182 Pandemic Relief Activities: Local Food Purchase Agreements with States, Tribes, and Local Governments $631,169 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Arng Environmental Resource Management $613,604 - 0
93.107 Area Health Education Centers - Point of Service Maintenance and Enhancement Awards $611,020 - 0
93.967 Covid-19 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Collaboration with Academia to Strengthen Public Health $606,325 - 0
84.424 Student Support and Academic Enrichment Program $602,500 - 0
11.035 Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program $600,892 - 0
11.307 Economic Adjustment Assistance $596,675 - 0
47.076 Stem Education (formerly Education and Human Resources) - Sfs Cyber CORP General Renewal $595,307 - 0
10.170 Specialty Crop Block Grant Program - Farm Bill - Sdda Dakota Flavor Marketplace $567,658 - 0
16.540 Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention - Allocation to States $564,935 - 0
93.988 Cooperative Agreements for Diabetes Control Programs $564,834 - 0
97.047 Bric: Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities $561,569 - 0
17.504 Consultation Agreements $555,513 - 0
20.219 Recreational Trails Program $553,302 - 0
93.301 Small Rural Hospital Improvement Grant Program $545,792 - 0
17.235 Senior Community Service Employment Program $537,061 - 0
10.578 Wic Grants to States (wgs) $536,718 - 0
84.181 Covid-19 Special Education - Grants for Infants and Families $534,280 - 0
20.513 Enhanced Mobility of Seniors and Individuals with Disabilities $531,421 - 0
93.977 Sexually Transmitted Diseases (std) Prevention and Control Grants $525,459 - 0
84.044 Trio Talent Search $517,019 - 0
12.400 Military Construction, National Guard - Watertown Vms $511,740 Yes 0
17.002 Labor Force Statistics $499,771 - 0
17.804 Local Veterans' Employment Representative Program $495,806 - 0
93.264 Nurse Faculty Loan Program (nflp) (note 3f) $494,549 - 0
93.630 Developmental Disabilities Basic Support and Advocacy Grants $486,267 - 0
93.242 Mental Health Research Grants - Ptsd, Aud, and Interpersonal Conflict: Within-Person Associations $472,064 - 0
93.645 Stephanie Tubbs Jones Child Welfare Services Program $469,548 - 0
15.227 Distribution of Receipts to State and Local Governments - Mineral Leasing and Taylor Grazing $455,545 - 0
93.191 Graduate Psychology Education $451,133 - 0
93.464 Acl Assistive Technology $450,858 - 0
16.738 Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program $450,668 - 0
84.031 Higher Education Institutional Aid - Title III Part A Programs - Strengthening Institutions $448,678 - 0
93.800 Organized Approaches to Increase Colorectal Cancer Screening $436,969 - 0
93.242 Mental Health Research Grants - Targeting Hiv Myeloid Reservoirs in the Cns by Iap and Trem1 Inhibition $435,293 - 0
93.747 Covid-19 Elder Abuse Prevention Interventions Program $433,179 - 0
93.243 Covid-19 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Projects of Regional and National Significance $433,043 - 0
93.855 Allergy and Infectious Diseases Research $431,118 - 0
16.543 Missing Children's Assistance - South Dakota Internet Crimes Against Children $420,039 - 0
12.404 National Guard Challenge Program $411,316 - 0
81.RD Basic Research and Development $411,259 - 0
93.837 Cardiovascular Diseases Research - Pkg and Pka Duo-Activation to Treat Cardiac Proteotoxicity $408,847 - 0
16.710 Public Safety Partnership and Community Policing Grants $403,910 - 0
93.336 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System $403,179 - 0
93.243 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Projects of Regional and National Significance - Project Aware $401,440 - 0
93.775 State Medicaid Fraud Control Units $400,402 Yes 1
93.991 Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant $398,990 - 0
93.859 Covid-19 Biomedical Research and Research Training - Biomedical Technology -Brin (biomedical Research Infrastructure Network) for South Dakota $397,133 - 0
16.017 Sexual Assault Services Formula Program $396,961 - 0
66.419 Water Pollution Control State, Interstate, and Tribal Program Support $394,395 - 0
93.243 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Projects of Regional and National Significance $382,829 - 0
93.788 Opioid Str $382,325 - 0
15.608 Fish and Aquatic Conservation - Aquatic Invasive Species - Quagga and Zebra Mussel Action Plan (qzap) $381,773 - 0
84.047 Trio Upward Bound $381,033 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Arng Telecommunications $378,498 - 0
11.032 State Digital Equity Planning and Capacity Grant $378,278 - 0
16.839 Stop School Violence $376,839 - 0
84.196 Education for Homeless Children and Youth $371,833 - 0
10.519 Equipment Grants Program (egp) $367,465 - 0
93.596 Covid-19 Child Care Mandatory and Matching Funds of the Child Care and Development Fund $367,429 - 0
64.005 Covid-19 Grants to States for Construction of State Home Facilities - South Dakota Veterans Home Covid Construction $365,088 - 0
93.603 Adoption and Legal Guardianship Incentive Payments Program $364,233 - 0
15.634 State Wildlife Grants $356,234 - 0
84.042 Trio Student Support Services $349,571 - 0
93.242 Mental Health Research Grants - Characterization of Trophic Factor Induced Antidepressant Action $346,300 - 0
84.323 Special Education - State Personnel Development $337,917 - 0
93.369 Acl Independent Living State Grants $334,325 - 0
39.011 Election Reform Payments - Help America Vote Act $329,227 - 0
93.497 Covid-19 Family Violence Prevention and Services/sexual Assault/rape Crisis Services and Supports $321,692 - 0
17.277 Wioa National Dislocated Worker Grants / Wia National Emergency Grants $318,963 - 0
47.079 Office of International Science and Engineering - Pire: Advanced Germanium Detectors and Technologies for Underground Physics $307,449 - 0
10.568 Emergency Food Assistance Program (administrative Costs) $304,333 - 0
10.565 Commodity Supplemental Food Program $304,003 - 0
93.946 Cooperative Agreements to Support State-Based Safe Motherhood and Infant Health Initiative Programs $303,909 - 0
81.U02 Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Contract $303,709 - 0
10.310 Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (afri) $301,198 - 0
10.202 Cooperative Forestry Research $299,989 - 0
93.048 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Iv, and Title Ii, Discretionary Projects $298,548 - 0
93.566 Refugee and Entrant Assistance State/replacement Designee Administered Programs $295,288 - 0
84.044 Trio Talent Search - Services to South Dakota Schools with Outstanding Need Sioux Falls $294,269 - 0
93.150 Projects for Assistance in Transition From Homelessness (path) $291,487 - 0
93.251 Early Hearing Detection and Intervention $290,785 - 0
93.324 State Health Insurance Assistance Program $289,519 - 0
84.425 Covid-19 Education Stabilization Fund - Arp - Emergency Assistance to Non-Public Schools $285,645 - 0
93.866 Aging Research - Priming the Proteasome to Protect Against Aging and Alzheimer's Disease $285,459 - 0
10.311 Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program $283,694 - 0
93.586 State Court Improvement Program $283,625 - 0
93.837 Cardiovascular Diseases Research - Cardiac Pathophysiology of Proteasome Phosphoregulation $281,301 - 0
10.902 Soil and Water Conservation $274,184 - 0
12.910 Research and Technology Development $273,852 - 0
84.177 Rehabilitation Services Independent Living Services for Older Individuals Who Are Blind $272,476 - 0
66.040 Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (dera) State Grants $272,397 - 0
93.767 Covid-19 Children's Health Insurance Program - 4.34% Ffcra Increase $267,146 - 0
93.197 Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Projects, State and Local Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention and Surveillance of Blood Lead Levels in Children $264,173 - 0
12.002 Procurement Technical Assistance for Business Firms $263,469 - 0
10.025 Plant and Animal Disease, Pest Control, and Animal Care $263,434 - 0
93.970 Health Professions Recruitment Program for Indians $261,914 - 0
66.804 Underground Storage Tank (ust) Prevention, Detection, and Compliance Program $261,704 - 0
12.903 Gencyber Grants Program $261,377 - 0
93.558 Covid-19 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families $260,021 Yes 1
17.273 Temporary Labor Certification for Foreign Workers $259,353 - 0
47.076 Stem Education (formerly Education and Human Resources) - Leveraging Computational Thinking to Increase Computer Science Within Elementary Classrooms $259,257 - 0
93.116 Project Grants and Cooperative Agreements for Tuberculosis Control Programs $255,877 - 0
17.268 H-1b Job Training Grants $255,839 - 0
10.001 Agricultural Research Basic and Applied Research $254,028 - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training - G-Rise $252,066 - 0
93.092 Affordable Care Act (aca) Personal Responsibility Education Program $250,035 - 0
66.034 Surveys, Studies, Research, Investigations, Demonstrations, and Special Purpose Activities Relating to the Clean Air Act $248,132 - 0
84.379 Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher Education Grants (teach Grants) $239,521 - 0
93.RD Developing Explainable MacHine Learning and Computational Methods for Identifying Geographic and Racial Disparities in End-Stage Renal Disease $238,920 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Arng Electronic Security $237,561 - 0
10.697 State & Private Forestry Hazardous Fuel Reduction Program $235,312 - 0
12.400 Military Construction, National Guard - Wagner Rc $234,907 Yes 0
93.273 Alcohol Research Programs - Influence of Early Developmental Ethanol Exposure on Genes, the Mtor Signaling Pathway and Behavior $234,522 - 0
84.358 Rural Education $234,349 - 0
59.079 Cybersecurity for Small Business Pilot Program $233,354 - 0
97.042 Covid-19 Emergency Management Performance Grants $232,881 - 0
93.351 Research Infrastructure Programs $232,272 - 0
93.090 Guardianship Assistance $229,865 - 0
81.041 State Energy Program $228,311 - 0
47.074 Biological Sciences $227,928 - 0
10.912 Environmental Quality Incentives Program $227,531 - 0
64.125 Vocational and Educational Counseling for Servicemembers and Veterans $226,069 - 0
10.331 Gus Schumacher Nutrition Incentive Programs $224,069 - 0
93.732 Mental and Behavioral Health Education and Training Grants $223,088 - 0
10.924 Conservation Stewardship Program $221,036 - 0
84.116 Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education $219,272 - 0
81.RD Restore Natural Recruitment of Kootenai River White Sturgeon $216,071 - 0
93.855 Allergy and Infectious Diseases Research - Biological Vector Borne Transmission of Salmonella by Cockroaches $215,768 - 0
17.245 Trade Adjustment Assistance $214,191 - 0
20.700 Pipeline Safety Program State Base Grant $213,124 - 0
11.024 Build to Scale - Northern Innovation and Startup Center $207,667 - 0
93.913 Grants to States for Operation of State Offices of Rural Health $203,373 - 0
64.014 Veterans State Domiciliary Care (note 3c) $202,601 - 0
15.504 Water Recycling and Desalination Construction Programs $198,783 - 0
93.837 Cardiovascular Diseases Research $196,695 - 0
66.805 Leaking Underground Storage Tank Trust Fund Corrective Action Program $196,190 - 0
93.103 Food and Drug Administration Research $193,286 - 0
10.207 Animal Health and Disease Research $191,815 - 0
97.041 National Dam Safety Program $191,704 - 0
10.303 Integrated Programs $190,726 - 0
47.050 Geosciences $190,615 - 0
47.049 Mathematical and Physical Sciences - Germanium-Based Neutrinoless Doublebeta Decay Searches $189,837 - 0
81.049 Office of Science Financial Assistance Program - Caspt2 Geometries, Spectra, and Relativistic Electronic Structures of Actinide Species $188,588 - 0
10.219 Biotechnology Risk Assessment Research $185,711 - 0
17.U01 Employment and Training Administration Evaluations $182,663 - 0
93.130 Cooperative Agreements to States/territories for the Coordination and Development of Primary Care Offices $181,315 - 0
93.876 Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance in Retail Food Specimens $179,883 - 0
20.701 University Transportation Centers Program $178,065 - 0
16.742 Paul Coverdell Forensic Sciences Improvement Grant Program $173,594 - 0
12.902 Information Security Grants $171,057 - 0
93.172 Human Genome Research $169,067 - 0
47.074 Biological Sciences - Collaborative Research: Costs and Trade-Offs of Phenotypically Flexible Responses to Winter Temperature Variability in Birds $167,041 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Arng Administrative Services $164,839 - 0
20.703 Interagency Hazardous Materials Public Sector Training and Planning Grants $164,654 - 0
93.361 Nursing Research $164,120 - 0
93.242 Mental Health Research Grants $163,132 - 0
93.127 Emergency Medical Services for Children $163,002 - 0
47.076 Stem Education (formerly Education and Human Resources) - Sfs Cyber CORP Sch Renewal $160,899 - 0
93.590 Community-Based Child Abuse Prevention Grants - Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment $160,210 - 0
15.805 Assistance to State Water Resources Research Institutes $159,934 - 0
11.405 Cooperative Institute (inter-Agency Funded Activities) $159,717 - 0
84.184 School Safely National Activities $156,633 - 0
47.070 Computer and Information Science and Engineering $154,230 - 0
10.RD Expanding Soil Health Through Carbon Markets Rcpp $153,806 - 0
93.235 Title V State Sexual Risk Avoidance Education (title V State Srae) Program $152,879 - 0
84.144 Migrant Education Coordination Program $150,698 - 0
12.RD Afcec - Ctn $149,878 - 0
93.870 Covid-19 Maternal, Infant and Early Childhood Home Visiting Grant $148,594 - 0
59.043 Women's Business Ownership Assistance - Project Grant $148,592 - 0
93.243 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Projects of Regional and National Significance - Strategic Prevention Framework State Incentive Grant $148,362 - 0
16.606 State Criminal Alien Assistance Program $148,330 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Arng Distance Learning $147,835 - 0
59.043 Women's Business Ownership Assistance - Initial Phase $147,557 - 0
10.903 Soil Survey $145,834 - 0
20.205 Highway Planning and Construction $145,451 - 0
10.025 Plant and Animal Disease, Pest Control, and Animal Care - National Surveillance and Response for Animal Health Activities (umbrella) $145,029 - 0
93.359 Nurse Education, Practice Quality and Retention Grants $144,221 - 0
93.042 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Vii, Chapter 2, Long Term Care Ombudsman Services for Older Individuals $142,623 - 0
16.576 Crime Victim Compensation $141,813 - 0
93.273 Alcohol Research Programs $140,227 - 0
93.659 Covid-19 Adoption Assistance - 6.2% Ffcra Increase $138,685 - 0
16.754 Harold Rogers Prescription Drug Monitoring Program $137,759 - 0
93.079 Cooperative Agreements to Promote Adolescent Health Through School-Based Hiv/std Prevention and School-Based Surveillance $136,553 - 0
12.431 Basic Scientific Research $136,539 - 0
66.802 Superfund State, Political Subdivision, and Indian Tribe Site-Specific Cooperative Agreements $136,388 - 0
84.325 Special Education - Personnel Development to Improve Services and Results for Children with Disabilities $135,328 - 0
93.847 Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases Extramural Research - Novel Target Mechanism (renal Nerves) for the Beneficial Actions of Sglt2 Inhibition in Congestive Heart Failure $134,720 - 0
93.396 Cancer Biology Research $134,324 - 0
93.RD Safe Integrated Engineering in Mining $132,803 - 0
47.074 Biological Sciences - Nsf 20-506 MacRosystems Biology and Neon-Enabled Science $131,993 - 0
12.351 Scientific Research - Combating Weapons of Mass Destruction $130,983 - 0
81.087 Renewable Energy Research and Development $129,391 - 0
16.039 Rural Violent Crime Initiative $128,901 - 0
10.561 Covid-19 State Administrative Matching Grants for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program $128,839 Yes 0
93.242 Mental Health Research Grants - Sex Differences in the Neurobiological Significance of Orexin Stress Signaling $128,687 - 0
20.505 Metropolitan Transportation Planning and State and Non-Metropolitan Planning and Research $128,315 - 0
10.025 Plant and Animal Disease, Pest Control, and Animal Care - Animal Disease Traceability (adt) $127,539 - 0
47.049 Mathematical and Physical Sciences $127,095 - 0
15.628 Multistate Conservation Grant $126,595 - 0
93.273 Alcohol Research Programs - Alcohol and "heat of the Moment" Sexual Decision Making Among Msm: Identifying Mechanisms of Sexual Risk and Promoting Behavior Change Through Brief Intervention $124,297 - 0
16.525 Grants to Reduce Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault, and Stalking on Campus $121,501 - 0
10.072 Wetlands Reserve Program $120,962 - 0
93.590 Covid-19 Community-Based Child Abuse Prevention Grants $120,380 - 0
10.766 Community Facilities Loans and Grants $120,368 - 0
93.043 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Iii, Part D, Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Services $120,070 - 0
84.902 National Assessment of Educational Progress (naep) $119,281 - 0
10.527 New Beginning for Tribal Students $117,851 - 0
10.579 Child Nutrition Discretionary Grants Limited Availability - Nslp Equipment $116,570 - 0
43.001 Science - Interdependent Dynamics of Food, Energy and Water in Kazakhstan and Mongolia: Connecting Lulcc to the Transitional Socioecological Systems $114,741 - 0
12.420 Military Medical Research and Development $112,654 - 0
47.083 Integrative Activities - Career: Mechanisms and Drivers Underlying Thermal Specialization Patterns in Elastic Recoil and Muscle Powered Movements $110,548 - 0
81.RD Small Business Technology Transfer Program $110,316 - 0
12.RD Pilot-Scale, Portable Water Treatment Train for Remediation of Pfas Contamination $109,063 - 0
84.425 Covid-19 Education Stabilization Fund - Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund (heerf) Strengthening Institutions Program $108,900 - 0
93.071 Medicare Enrollment Assistance Program $108,315 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Arng Anti-Terrorism Program Coordinator Activities $106,735 - 0
15.820 National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers $106,532 - 0
32.011 Affordable Connectivity Outreach Grant Program $104,567 - 0
12.U01 Archeological Services $99,788 - 0
93.334 The Healthy Brain Initiative: Technical Assistance to Implement Public Health Actions Related to Cognitive Health, Cognitive Impairment, and Caregiving at the State and Local Levels $98,370 - 0
93.279 Drug Abuse and Addiction Research Programs - Summer Program for Undergraduate Research in Addiction $97,791 - 0
84.326 Special Education Technical Assistance and Dissemination to Improve Services and Results for Children with Disabilities $97,179 - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training - Midwestern Changes in Substance Use and Treatment During the Covid-19 Pandemic $96,183 - 0
84.129 Rehabilitation Long-Term Training $95,908 - 0
81.135 Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy $95,506 - 0
84.187 Supported Employment Services for Individuals with the Most Significant Disabilities $95,224 - 0
10.923 Emergency Watershed Protection Program $95,000 - 0
15.657 Endangered Species Recovery Implementation $94,596 - 0
93.413 The State Flexibility to Stabilize the Market Grant Program $94,346 - 0
47.049 Mathematical and Physical Sciences - Nsf Center for Sustainable Polymers $94,287 - 0
93.643 Children's Justice Grants to States $93,923 - 0
43.008 Office of Stem Engagement (ostem) $93,672 - 0
47.049 Mathematical and Physical Sciences - Reu Site: Molecules Meet Materials $92,946 - 0
59.077 Community Navigator Pilot Program $92,568 - 0
93.847 Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases Extramural Research $92,558 - 0
10.579 Covid-19 Child Nutrition Discretionary Grants Limited Availability - Nslp Equipment $92,462 - 0
93.599 Chafee Education and Training Vouchers Program (etv) $92,455 - 0
47.083 Integrative Activities - Rii-Bec: Grounding Science Education in Indigenous Knowledges, Food Systems, and Sustainability $92,263 - 0
15.945 Cooperative Research and Training Programs - Resources of the National Park System $91,900 - 0
93.853 Extramural Research Programs in the Neurosciences and Neurological Disorders - Modulating Low-Frequency Cortical Population Dynamics to Augment Motor Function After Stroke $90,651 - 0
10.435 State Mediation Grants $90,352 - 0
47.084 Nsf Technology, Innovation, and Partnerships $89,856 - 0
93.597 Grants to States for Access and Visitation Programs $89,550 - 0
10.309 Specialty Crop Research Initiative $89,073 - 0
66.454 Water Quality Management Planning $88,769 - 0
16.026 Ovw Research and Evaluation Program - Healing Among Rural and Indigenous Women Victims of Domestic Violence: A Mixed-Methodological Analysis $88,105 - 0
84.027 Covid-19 Special Education Grants to States (idea, Part B) $87,991 - 0
17.603 Brookwood-Sago Grant $87,825 - 0
10.215 Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education $87,268 - 0
12.113 State Memorandum of Agreement Program for the Reimbursement of Technical Services - Defense Environmental Restoration Program $87,182 - 0
47.078 Polar Programs $85,327 - 0
47.076 Stem Education (formerly Education and Human Resources) - Nrt $85,279 - 0
10.153 Market News $84,478 - 0
93.669 Child Abuse and Neglect State Grants $84,149 - 0
47.074 Biological Sciences - Career: Mechanisms and Drivers Underlying Thermal Specialization Patterns in Elastic Recoil and Muscle Powered Movements $83,396 - 0
93.060 Sexual Risk Avoidance Education - (title V State Srae) Program $83,122 - 0
10.516 Rural Health and Safety Education Competitive Grants Program $80,713 - 0
90.401 Help America Vote Act Requirements Payments $79,995 - 0
10.174 Acer Access Development Program $78,870 - 0
15.654 National Wildlife Refuge System Enhancements $78,847 - 0
14.902 Lead Technical Studies Grants $78,686 - 0
14.906 Healthy Homes Technical Studies Grants $78,686 - 0
15.228 Blm Fuels Management and Community Fire Assistance Program Activities $78,303 - 0
11.432 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (noaa) Cooperative Institutes $77,332 - 0
47.049 Mathematical and Physical Sciences - Career: Understanding Structure-Function Relationships of Polyoxovanadate-Alkoxide Clusters From A Bottom-Up Perspective $76,952 - 0
47.083 Integrative Activities - Career: Understanding Structure-Function Relationships of Polyoxovanadate-Alkoxide Clusters From A Bottom-Up Perspective $76,952 - 0
84.217 Trio McNair Post-Baccalaureate Achievement $76,158 - 0
81.U04 Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Contract $75,267 - 0
81.049 Office of Science Financial Assistance Program $74,960 - 0
12.905 Cybersecurity Core Curriculum - Ncae-C Uwf $74,694 - 0
10.217 Higher Education - Institution Challenge Grants Program $73,504 - 0
10.187 The Emergency Food Assistance Program (tefap) Commodity Credit Corporation Eligible Recipient Funds $72,500 - 0
10.575 Farm to School Grant Program $71,354 - 0
93.110 Maternal and Child Health Federal Consolidated Programs - South Dakota State Systems Development Initiative and Children's Oral Healthcare Access Program $70,636 - 0
47.084 Nsf Technology, Innovation, and Partnerships - Nsf I-Corps Hub (track 2): Great Plains Region $68,596 - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training $68,585 - 0
10.525 Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network Competitive Grants Program $68,424 - 0
20.232 Commercial Driver's License Program Implementation Grant $68,365 - 0
93.658 Covid-19 Foster Care Title IV-E - 6.2% Ffcra Increase $68,238 - 0
10.330 Alfalfa Seed and Alfalfa Forage Systems Program $68,176 - 0
17.271 Work Opportunity Tax Credit Program (wotc) $67,605 - 0
10.177 Regional Food System Partnerships $67,380 - 0
10.931 Agricultural Conservation Easement Program $66,498 - 0
16.590 Grants to Encourage Arrest Policies and Enforcement of Protection Orders Program $66,442 - 0
12.300 Basic and Applied Scientific Research $66,342 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Master Cooperative Agreement: Ang Environmental Program Management $65,380 - 0
93.865 Child Health and Human Development Extramural Research - Using Structured Video Chat to Improve Relationships Between Young Children and Remote Grandparents $64,669 - 0
93.866 Aging Research $63,869 - 0
11.U01 Economic Development Technical Assistance $63,684 - 0
16.816 John R. Justice Prosecutors and Defenders Incentive Act $63,059 - 0
89.003 National Historical Publications and Records Grants $60,411 - 0
12.401 National Guard Military Operations and Maintenance (o&m) Projects - Interservice Support Agreement: Aberdeen Armed Forces Reserve Center $59,954 - 0
17.270 Reentry Employment Opportunities $59,287 - 0
93.121 Oral Diseases and Disorders Research $56,890 - 0
20.513 Covid-19 Enhanced Mobility of Seniors and Individuals with Disabilities $55,934 - 0
20.215 Highway Training and Education $55,150 - 0
12.905 Cybersecurity Core Curriculum - Cyber Curriculum and Research $54,878 - 0
17.600 Mine Health and Safety Grants $54,842 - 0
12.902 Information Security Grants - Ncaec Fac Dev Workshop Travel $54,725 - 0
11.303 Economic Development Technical Assistance $54,227 - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training - Dakota Cancer Collaborative on Translational Activity - Year 5 $54,183 - 0
84.372 Statewide Longitudinal Data Systems $53,620 - 0
12.902 Information Security Grants - Nsa Cyber Scholarship Program at Dsu $53,530 - 0
43.RD NASA Marshall Space Flight Center - Central Shipping and Receiving $53,350 - 0
20.614 National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (nhtsa) Discretionary Safety Grants and Cooperative Agreements - State Support of the Fatal Accident Reporting System (fars) $53,080 - 0
93.310 Trans-Nih Research Support - Midwest Biomedical Accelerator Consortium $52,864 - 0
12.RD Basic and Applied Scientific Research $52,714 - 0
16.589 Rural Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault, and Stalking Assistance Program $52,701 - 0
16.560 National Institute of Justice Research, Evaluation, and Development Project Grants - Addressing Violence Towards Youth and Young Adults in Indigenous Communities $52,312 - 0
81.RD Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (dune) $52,058 - 0
16.026 Ovw Research and Evaluation Program - Indigenous-Led Research on Sex Trafficking Among Native Americans in Western South Dakota $51,844 - 0
81.RD Small Business Innovation Research $50,595 - 0
64.203 Veterans Cemetery Grants Program $50,436 - 0
81.049 Office of Science Financial Assistance Program - Transforming Critical Materials Separations Through Metal-Oxo Cluster Chemistry $50,290 - 0
12.RD Small Business Technology Transfer $50,006 - 0
93.283 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Investigations and Technical Assistance $48,651 - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training - Intervention to Promote Breast Cancer Screening Among American Indian Women $47,716 - 0
66.814 Brownfields Training, Research, and Technical Assistance Grants and Cooperative Agreements $46,117 - 0
47.041 Engineering $44,619 - 0
93.393 Cancer Cause and Prevention Research $44,601 - 0
21.008 Low Income Taxpayer Clinics $43,990 - 0
93.853 Extramural Research Programs in the Neurosciences and Neurological Disorders - Foxos in Ischemic Stroke $43,527 - 0
10.025 Plant and Animal Disease, Pest Control, and Animal Care - National Animal Disease Preparedness and Response Program (nadprp) $42,749 - 0
93.456 Cdc Undergraduate Public Health Scholars Program (cups): A Public Health Experience to Expose Undergraduates Interested in Minority Health to Public Health and the Public Health Professions $41,487 - 0
15.246 Threatened and Endangered Species $40,891 - 0
93.072 Lifespan Respite Care Program $39,556 - 0
93.837 Cardiovascular Diseases Research - the Role of Probdnf-P75ntr Signaling in Hind Limb Ischemia $39,426 - 0
10.025 Plant and Animal Disease, Pest Control, and Animal Care - Farmed Cervid Cwd Management and Response Activities $38,686 - 0
10.520 Agriculture Risk Management Education Partnerships Competitive Grants Program $37,736 - 0
10.652 Forestry Research - Forest Inventory Analysis $36,693 - 0
15.245 Plant Conservation and Restoration Management $36,083 - 0
10.307 Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative $35,824 - 0
15.637 Migratory Bird Joint Ventures $35,065 - 0
15.808 U.s. Geological Survey Research and Data Collection - Development of A Portable Field Assay to Detect Environmental Dna of the Endangered Hine's Emerald Dragonfly and Devil Crayfish at A Landscape Level $35,041 - 0
15.664 Fish and Wildlife Coordination and Assistance $34,402 - 0
93.172 Human Genome Research - Integrated, Individualized, and Intelligent Prescribing (13p) Clinical Trial Network $33,801 - 0
93.041 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Vii, Chapter 3, Programs for Prevention of Elder Abuse, Neglect, and Exploitation $33,552 - 0
93.671 Covid-19 Family Violence Prevention and Services/domestic Violence Shelter and Supportive Services $33,371 - 0
12.330 Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics (stem) Education, Outreach and Workforce Program $33,305 - 0
81.RD Basic and Applied Scientific Research $32,762 - 0
30.002 Employment Discrimination_state and Local Fair Employment Practices Agency Contracts $32,559 - 0
10.212 Small Business Innovation Research (sbir) Program / Small Business Technology Transfer (sttr) Program $32,360 - 0
16.026 Ovw Research and Evaluation Program $32,143 - 0
81.U03 Battelle Memorial Institute, Pacific Northwest Division $29,932 - 0
47.075 Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences - Long-Term Human Reponses to Ecological Instability $29,780 - 0
10.025 Plant and Animal Disease, Pest Control, and Animal Care - US Swine Health Improvement Plan $29,432 - 0
12.905 Cybersecurity Core Curriculum - Ncae-C Cpnc Credit Transfer Sub $29,351 - 0
17.801 Jobs for Veterans State Grants $29,193 - 0
12.905 Cybersecurity Core Curriculum - MacHine Learning Assisted Cloud-Based Continuous Learning Approach for Iot Device Identification $28,951 - 0
10.541 Child Nutrition-Technology Innovation Grant $28,942 - 0
47.083 Geosciencesintegrative Activities $28,148 - 0
10.025 Plant and Animal Disease, Pest Control, and Animal Care - Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (hpai) $27,833 - 0
10.542 Covid-19 Pandemic Ebt Food Benefits (note 3e) $26,987 - 0
17.502 Occupational Safety and Health Susan Harwood Training Grants $26,955 - 0
10.680 Forest Health Protection - Western Bark Beetle $26,870 - 0
12.800 Air Force Defense Research Sciences Program $26,442 - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training - Daccota Yr5 - All-in-One Nanoparticle for Breast Cancer Treatment Based on Phototherapy and Chemodynamic Therapy $25,873 - 0
93.630 Covid-19 Developmental Disabilities Basic Support and Advocacy Grants $25,612 - 0
47.075 Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences $25,240 - 0
12.RD Commercial Technologies for Maintenance Activities Program $25,203 - 0
10.RD Forestry Research $25,084 - 0
16.U01 Technical Assistance Grant $25,000 - 0
16.922 Equitable Sharing Program $24,930 - 0
10.190 Resilient Food Systems Infrastructure Program $24,714 - 0
81.121 Nuclear Energy Research, Development and Demonstration $24,697 - 0
19.501 Public Diplomacy Programs for Afghanistan and Pakistan $24,615 - 0
12.RD Basic Scientific Research $24,424 - 0
45.162 Promotion of the Humanities Teaching and Learning Resources and Curriculum Development $23,672 - 0
10.912 Environmental Quality Incentives Program - Thinning $23,440 - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training - Center for Biobehavioral Mechanisms of Eating Behavior $23,355 - 0
93.044 Covid-19 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Iii, Part B, Grants for Supportive Services and Senior Centers $23,054 - 0
10.250 Agricultural and Rural Economic Research, Cooperative Agreements and Collaborations $22,967 - 0
10.568 Covid-19 Emergency Food Assistance Program (administrative Costs) $22,455 - 0
16.838 Comprehensive Opioid, Stimulant, and Other Substances Use Program - Minnehaha County - Cossap Grant $21,562 - 0
45.161 Promotion of the Humanities Research $21,141 - 0
15.808 U.s. Geological Survey Research and Data Collection $21,023 - 0
47.076 Stem Education (formerly Education and Human Resources) $20,212 - 0
47.070 Computer and Information Science and Engineering - Computing Innovation Fellows 2021 Project $19,242 - 0
10.720 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Community Wildfire Defense Grants $18,994 - 0
15.662 Great Lakes Restoration $18,842 - 0
47.050 Geosciences - Rui: Collaborative Research: Dust in the Critical Zone From the Great Basin to the Rocky Mountains $18,787 - 0
15.812 Cooperative Research Units $18,604 - 0
81.049 Office of Science Financial Assistance Program - Design of A Cryogenic Scintillation Neutrino Detector at the Spallation Neutron Source $18,585 - 0
10.332 Agricultural Genome to Phenome Initiative $18,123 - 0
84.173 Covid-19 Special Education Preschool Grants (idea Preschool) $17,608 - 0
11.473 Office for Coastal Management $17,533 - 0
16.817 Byrne Criminal Justice Innovation Program $17,508 - 0
20.200 Highway Research and Development Program $17,451 - 0
10.336 Veterinary Services Grant Program $16,395 - 0
15.236 Environmental Quality and Protection $16,292 - 0
10.707 Research Joint Venture and Cost Reimbursable Agreements $16,001 - 0
10.U01 Challenge Cost-Share Supplemental for Long Term Archival Services for Black Hills National Forest Historical Collection $15,698 - 0
10.170 Specialty Crop Block Grant Program - Farm Bill $15,591 - 0
10.173 Sheep Production and Marketing Grant Program $15,512 - 0
10.699 Partnership Agreements $14,813 - 0
93.310 Trans-Nih Research Support $14,214 - 0
16.833 National Sexual Assault Kit Initiative $13,988 - 0
15.815 National Land Remote Sensing Education Outreach and Research $13,775 - 0
16.560 National Institute of Justice Research, Evaluation, and Development Project Grants $13,524 - 0
10.556 Special Milk Program for Children $13,375 - 0
20.616 National Priority Safety Programs $13,106 - 0
15.608 Fish and Aquatic Conservation - Aquatic Invasive Species $12,885 - 0
12.RD Supercritical Fluid Extraction of Imx Material $12,564 - 0
19.040 Public Diplomacy Programs $12,062 - 0
10.069 Conservation Reserve Program $11,716 - 0
15.247 Wildlife Resource Management $11,689 - 0
15.945 Cooperative Research and Training Programs - Resources of the National Park System - Expand Missouri River Intern Program $11,429 - 0
93.042 Covid-19 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Vii, Chapter 2, Long Term Care Ombudsman Services for Older Individuals $10,835 - 0
12.RD Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program $10,792 - 0
16.044 Forensics Training and Technical Assistance Program $10,318 - 0
10.678 Forest Stewardship Program $10,000 - 0
12.RD Small Business Innovation Research $10,000 - 0
93.262 Occupational Safety and Health Program $9,818 - 0
93.838 Lung Diseases Research - Hyperoxic Modulation of Thioredoxin Signaling $9,751 - 0
10.304 Food and Agriculture Defense Initiative (fadi) $9,606 - 0
15.244 Aquatics Resources Management $9,510 - 0
16.735 Prea Program: Strategic Support for Prea Implementation $9,465 - 0
12.225 Commercial Technologies for Maintenance Activities Program - Improved Hardware Sustainment Through Solid State Additive Manufacturing Development $9,434 - 0
93.791 Covid-19 Money Follows the Person Rebalancing Demonstration - 3.1% Ffcra Increase $9,150 - 0
12.355 Pest Management and Vector Control Research $8,581 - 0
12.112 Payments to States in Lieu of Real Estate Taxes $8,349 - 0
10.163 Market Protection and Promotion $8,143 - 0
10.717 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Restoration/revegetation $7,798 - 0
59.043 Women's Business Ownership Assistance - New Renewal (base Year) $7,739 - 0
93.665 Covid-19 Emergency Grants to Address Mental and Substance Use Disorders During Covid-19 $7,715 - 0
93.045 Covid-19 Special Programs for the Aging, Title Iii, Part C, Nutrition Services $7,497 - 0
10.557 Covid-19 Wic Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (note 3i) $7,484 - 0
93.124 Nurse Anesthetist Traineeship $7,480 - 0
10.328 Food Safety Outreach Program $7,422 - 0
10.771 Rural Cooperative Development Grants $7,331 - 0
45.162 Covid-19 Promotion of the Humanities Teaching and Learning Resources and Curriculum Development $7,218 - 0
12.U03 Cultural Resources Management Plans $7,096 - 0
10.652 Forestry Research $6,636 - 0
93.395 Cancer Treatment Research $6,332 - 0
11.431 Climate and Atmospheric Research $6,259 - 0
93.397 Cancer Centers Support Grants $5,848 - 0
10.912 Environmental Quality Incentives Program - Agroforestry $5,533 - 0
14.171 Manufactured Housing $5,043 - 0
12.114 Collaborative Research and Development $4,940 - 0
45.301 Museums for America $4,636 - 0
12.905 Cybersecurity Core Curriculum $4,280 - 0
43.001 Science $3,998 - 0
93.090 Covid-19 Guardianship Assistance - 6.2% Ffcra Increase $3,452 - 0
59.037 Covid-19 Small Business Development Centers $3,414 - 0
93.173 Research Related to Deafness and Communication Disorders $3,194 - 0
15.511 Cultural Resources Management $2,941 - 0
12.U02 Cultural Assessment $2,796 - 0
10.RD Paleontology Program $2,635 - 0
15.810 National Cooperative Geological Mapping $2,597 - 0
15.255 Science and Technology Projects Related to Coal Mining and Reclamation $2,538 - 0
93.052 Covid-19 National Family Caregiver Support, Title Iii, Part E $2,504 - 0
97.029 Flood Mitigation Assistance $2,154 - 0
47.RD Vital Prize Challenge $2,119 - 0
93.859 Biomedical Research and Research Training - Akt/mtor Pathway in Obesity and Colorectal Cancer (crc): Molecular Interconnections and Potential Clinical Applications $2,102 - 0
12.630 Basic, Applied, and Advanced Research in Science and Engineering $2,000 - 0
10.676 Forest Legacy Program $1,857 - 0
45.129 Promotion of the Humanities Federal/state Partnership $1,670 - 0
45.024 Promotion of the Arts Grants to Organizations and Individuals $1,613 - 0
93.496 Family Violence Prevention and Services/culturally Specific Domestic Violence and Sexual Violence Services $1,472 - 0
47.076 Stem Education (formerly Education and Human Resources) - Nsf $1,447 - 0
10.329 Crop Protection and Pest Management Competitive Grants Program $1,429 - 0
59.077 Covid-19 Community Navigator Pilot Program $1,416 - 0
43.RD NASA Marshall Space Flight Center - Fy22 Center Innovation Fund (cif) $1,342 - 0
66.460 Nonpoint Source Implementation Grants - Land Use Explorer Kits $1,215 - 0
10.500 Cooperative Extension Service $1,136 - 0
15.678 Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Units $1,029 - 0
47.070 Computer and Information Science and Engineering - Great Plains Regional Cyber Team $841 - 0
10.589 Child Nutrition Direct Certification Performance Awards $693 - 0
15.808 U.s. Geological Survey Research and Data Collection - Dragonfly Mercury Project $545 - 0
10.721 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act Temporary Bridge Program $517 - 0
15.663 Nfwf-Usfws Conservation Partnership $471 - 0
10.902 Soil and Water Conservation - Agroforestry Tech Assist and Windbreak Renovation $470 - 0
19.009 Academic Exchange Programs - Undergraduate Programs $396 - 0
66.516 P3 Award: National Student Design Competition for Sustainability $167 - 0
10.777 Norman E. Borlaug International Agricultural Science and Technology Fellowship $132 - 0
93.569 Covid-19 Community Services Block Grant $55 - 0
47.076 Stem Education (formerly Education and Human Resources) - Next Generation Concept Inventory to Help Environmental Programs Evaluate Student Knowledge of Complex Food-Energy-Water Systems in Environmental Education $40 - 0
93.847 Diabetes, Digestive, and Kidney Diseases Extramural Research - Novel Target Mechanism to Reduce Sodium Retention in Chronic Health Failure $11 - 0
93.855 Allergy and Infectious Diseases Research - Antibacterial Nanoparticles As Insecticide Synergists and Insect Growth Regulators for Improved Control of Cockroach Infestations $8 - 0

Contacts

Name Title Type
PA32TLEZLKH7 Jim Terwilliger Auditee
6057733411 Russell A. Olson Auditor
No contacts on file

Notes to SEFA

Title: Note 3A. Commodities Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. Commodities administered through distributing agencies totaling $8,775,553 ($2,880,970 under ALN 10.555, $3,682 under ALN 10.559, and $5,890,901 under ALN 10.569) are included in the definition of expenditures of federal awards for the purpose of the accompanying Schedule. Commodities are valued at the last purchase price.
Title: Note 3B. Federal Surplus Property Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. As of June 30, 2024, donated federal surplus property (ALN 39.003) reported on the Schedule totaled $1,574,026, which represents 23.3% of the original acquisition cost of the federal surplus property received by the State. Of that amount, $1,511,681 was passed through. This percentage approximates the fair market value of the property at the time of distribution as determined by the General Services Administration.
Title: Note 3C. Veteran's State Care Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. The amounts reported as federal expenditures for ALN 64.014 and 64.015 represent cash received. Federal reimbursements are based on approved rates for services provided, rather than reimbursement for specific expenditures.
Title: Note 3D. Perkins Loans Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. Perkins Loan amounts (ALN 84.038) include federal, state, and program revenues. The exact portion associated with federal dollars cannot be readily determined.
Title: Note 3E. Electronic Benefits Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. Electronic benefits under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) (ALN 10.551) totaled $178,360,860 and are included in the federal financial assistance reported on the Schedule. Additional benefits provided in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic under the Pandemic EBT Food Benefits program (ALN 10.542) totaled $26,987 and are also reported on the Schedule.
Title: Note 3F. Outstanding Loan Balances Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. Federally funded loan programs had the following outstanding loan balances at year end: 84.038 Perkins Loans Funds - $4,041,162; 93.264 Nurse Faculty Loan Program - $494,549; 93.342 Health Professions Student Loans, Including Primary Care Loans and Loans for Disadvantaged Students - $9,619,420; 93.364 Nursing Student Loans - $2,907,538. <See Table for Administrative Costs and Loan Disbursements>
Title: Note 3G. State Revolving Funds Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. The expenditures provided for the Clean Water State Revolving Fund (ALN 66.458) and the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (ALN 66.468) consist of federal, state, and program revenues, the exact percentage of which is not readily determinable. The same requirements are followed for all loans regardless of the funding source utilized. The amount of federal expenditures reported on the Schedule consists of administrative expenses in the amount of $550,672 and loan disbursements totaling $91,426,470 for ALN 66.458, and $1,581,161 in administrative expenses and $10,129,844 in loan disbursements for ALN 66.468.
Title: Note 3H. Federal Direct Student Loan Disbursements Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. Loans disbursed under the Federal Direct Student Loans program (ALN 84.268) and issued to parents of eligible students or eligible students attending state universities had the following values: Direct Subsidized Loans - $ 28,632,992; Direct Unsubsidized Loans - $73,124,223; Direct PLUS & G PLUS Program Loans - $19,912,084
Title: Note 3I. WIC Rebates Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. During the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, the South Dakota Department of Health (DOH) received $3,458,353 in cash rebates from infant formula manufacturers on sales of formula to participants in the WIC Program (ALN 10.557). Rebate contracts with infant formula manufacturers are authorized by 7 CFR 246.16(a) as a cost containment measure. Rebates represent a reduction of expenditures previously incurred for WIC food. The rebate contract allowed the DOH to serve 4,052 more persons during fiscal year 2024.
Title: Note 3J. Airport Improvement Program Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. The South Dakota Department of Transportation (SDDOT) acts as a channeling state for the various Airport Improvement Program grants (ALN 20.106) funded through the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). The majority of these grants are between the FAA and cities, counties, and airport authorities that carry out the projects. Total reimbursements processed in fiscal year 2024 for channeling grants amounted to $37,317,159 and $10,714,641 (COVID-19). These monies are not reflected on the Schedule as expenditures of federal awards of the State. The $979,116 reported on the Schedule under ALN 20.106 was expended under a separate agreement between the SDDOT and the FAA in which the SDDOT is considered the grant recipient and directly funds multiple small projects at these airports.
Title: Note 3K. Unemployment Insurance Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. The amount included as of June 30, 2024, on the unemployment insurance section of the Schedule (ALN 17.225) is reported on the accrual basis of accounting and includes the amount of federal unemployment insurance, the amount of the State’s expenditure for unemployment insurance benefits, the amount of administrative expense, and the amount of Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance as required by the U.S. Department of Labor and the Inspector General. The amounts are $1,296,163, $30,535,814, $5,118,336, and $25,227 respectively. An additional $1,079,606 of pandemic unemployment assistance was received for COVID-19, which is also reported under ALN 17.225.
Title: Note 3L. Intermediary Relending Program Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. The South Dakota Governor’s Office of Economic Development, through the South Dakota Economic Development Finance Authority (EDFA), participates in the United States Department of Agriculture Rural Business Cooperative Service (RBCS) Intermediary Relending Program (IRP). As of June 30, 2024, EDFA had drawn down $2,179,030 of RBCS loan funds and had disbursed all these RBCS funds. The total value of loans issued as of June 30, 2024, was $4,201,600, with the total remaining loans outstanding as of June 30, 2024, equaling $648,048.
Title: Note 3M. Petroleum Violation Escrow Funds Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. Department of Energy (DOE) programs were funded in part by Petroleum Violation Escrow (PVE) funds which represent the State’s share of settlement proceeds in various lawsuits between the Federal Government and oil producers. During fiscal year 2024, the South Dakota Department of Tourism had $2,099,777 in expenditures from the trust fund in support of DOE programs and received $1,376,203 in loan payments. These expenditures are not included on the Schedule.
Title: Note 3N. Child Support Enforcement Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. The amount of expenditures reported for the Child Support Enforcement program (ALN 93.563) was not reduced by $1,578,234 which is the federal share of prior quarters’ Title IV-A collections retained to fund the Child Support Enforcement program during fiscal year 2024.
Title: Note 3O. Public Assistance Disaster Grants Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. After a Presidentially Declared Disaster, FEMA provides a Public Assistance Grant to reimburse eligible costs associated with repair, replacement, or restoration of disaster-damaged areas. The federal government reimburses in the form of cost-shared grants which requires state matching funds. For the year ended June 30, 2024, the amount included in the accompanying schedule for Disaster Grants – Public Assistance (Presidentially Declared Disasters) (ALN 97.036) includes $1,504,627 of approved eligible expenditures that were incurred in previous years.
Title: Note 3P. COVID-19 PPE Inventory (Unaudited) Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. (Unaudited) During fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, the State of South Dakota used $67,335 of inventory to assist in the fight against the global COVID-19 pandemic. The State had an amount of $646,625 from prior fiscal years, and did not receive any additional inventory in fiscal year 2024. Because donated personal protective equipment (PPE) has no bearing on the single audit, this footnote was not audited as part of the Single Audit.
Title: Note 3Q. SDHDA and SDEDA Accounting Policies: A. Reporting Entity - The accompanying Schedule includes all federal financial assistance programs administered by the State and its component units for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, except for the programs administered by the South Dakota Housing Development Authority and South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority, which have elected to have their own Single Audits as described in Note 3Q. B. Basis of Presentation - The information in the Schedule is presented in accordance with Uniform Guidance. 1. Federal Awards - Federal financial assistance is defined in the Uniform Guidance as assistance that non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of grants, cooperative agreements, non-cash contributions or donations of property, direct appropriations, food commodities, loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, insurance, and other financial assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services rendered to individuals for Medicare and Medicaid. The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance is a government-wide compendium of individual federal programs. Each program included in the catalog is assigned a five-digit Assistance Listing Number (ALN) and program name. The accompanying schedule and footnotes reflect the program names and ALNs assigned by the https://sam.gov website. Federal financial assistance programs and contracts which have not been assigned an ALN or, where management has been unable to determine the ALN, are identified with a two-digit number that identifies the federal awarding agency followed by ‘UNKNOWN’. 2. Clusters of Programs - Closely related programs with different ALNs which share common compliance requirements are considered clusters of programs, as determined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Most clusters of programs are contained within a single federal awarding agency and are reported on the Schedule under the respective awarding agency. Two clusters, the Research and Development Cluster and the Student Financial Assistance Cluster, have awards from two or more federal agencies. These clusters are reported on the Schedule in total under each federal awarding agency, with the detail for each individual award being shown by federal awarding agency at the bottom of the Schedule. 3. Pandemic Funding - Program expenditures of funds awarded in response to the Coronavirus Pandemic are identified with “COVID-19” in the Program Title. 4. Type A and Type B Programs - The Uniform Guidance establishes the levels of expenditures or expenses to be used in defining Type A and Type B federal financial assistance programs. Type A programs for the State are those which equaled or exceeded $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Type B programs for the State are those which are less than $10,000,000 in expenditures/disbursements/issuances for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. C. Basis of Accounting - The information presented in the Schedule is presented on the cash basis of accounting, which is consistent with other federal grant reports, except for the Unemployment Insurance program (ALN 17.225), which is reported on the accrual basis. The State’s basic financial statements are reported on the modified accrual or the accrual basis of accounting and, therefore, the Schedule's data may not be directly traceable to the basic financial statements. The Schedule includes a portion of costs associated with general activities which are allocated to federal financial assistance programs under negotiated formulas commonly referred to as indirect cost rates. Several of South Dakota’s state agencies and its component units have negotiated indirect cost rates or other approved cost allocation plans for the purpose of claiming indirect costs, while others do not. The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. D. Expenditures and Expenses - All federal expenditures included in the Schedule are assistance received directly from the federal government or indirectly through entities from outside the State. When monies are received by one state grantee agency and re-distributed (expended) to another state grantee agency (i.e. a subaward of funds by the primary recipient state grantee agency to a subrecipient state grantee agency), the federal financial assistance is reflected in the primary receiving/expending state grantee agency's accounts. This is to avoid duplication and the overstatement of the aggregate level of federal financial assistance expended by the State. De Minimis Rate Used: Both Rate Explanation: The Board of Regents Central Office claimed the 10 percent de minimis cost rate during fiscal year 2024 for ALN 47.083 Integrative Activities. This was the only state agency that claimed the de minimus cost rate during fiscal year 2024. The South Dakota Housing Development Authority (SDHDA) and the South Dakota Ellsworth Development Authority (SDEDA) are discretely presented component units of the State. The SDHDA and SDEDA have chosen to have their own separate Single Audits performed and reported their federal expenditures, including loan information, in their own SEFAs. For SEFA reporting, the SDHDA and SDEDA were treated as subrecipients of State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (ALN 21.027), for which SDHDA received $7,800,053 and SDEDA received $230,000 from the State during the fiscal year ended June 30, 2024. Copies of the SDHDA and the SDEDA Single Audits are available from the Department of Legislative Audit, 427 South Chapelle, c/o 500 East Capitol, by calling (605)773-3595, or online at https://legislativeaudit.sd.gov/reports/reports.aspx

Finding Details

Finding No. 2024-005: Inadequate controls over the payment of claims. Type of Finding: Material Weakness Assistance Listing Title: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Assistance Listing Number: 93.558 Federal Award Numbers: 2201SDTANF, 2301SDTANF, 2401SDTANF Federal Award Years: 2022, 2023, 2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Activities Allowed or Unallowed Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 263.11(a)(2) allows states to use Federal TANF funds for emergency services “For which the State was authorized to use IV-A or IV-F funds under prior law, as in effect on September 30, 1995 (or, at the option of the State, August 21, 1996).” 45 CFR 75.303 requires the non-Federal entity to: (a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government,” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework,” issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). 45 CFR 75.403(g) requires costs to be adequately documented to be allowable under Federal awards. The Family and Child Information System (FACIS) is utilized to process TANF emergency assistance payments. Approximately $6.8 million in federal TANF emergency assistance claims were processed on the FACIS system during FY24. Chapter XIII of the FACIS Manual states: “Any claims entered on the New Claim Entry screen require supervisor approval before payment is made. The claims entered by Batch also require supervisor approval.” Condition: Out of 77 TANF emergency assistance paid claims tested, we identified the following: • Claim Approval There was no evidence on the FACIS system of more than one person being involved with the authorization or payment of 45 claims. Sixteen of these 45 claims were “batch” claims for monthly foster care maintenance type payments and there was no documentation of claim payment approval on the FACIS system. Twenty-three of these 45 claims were miscellaneous type claims with no documentation of claim payment approval on the FACIS system. These 39 claims were entered and paid prior to DSS adding a field on the FACIS system in January of 2024 to document claim payment approval. Six claims were paid after this field was added to the FACIS system in January of 2024 and were approved for payment by the same person that entered the claim. • Payment Exceeding Authorized Amount For one client, the monthly amount authorized for daycare was exceeded in the month related to the claim tested, resulting in an overpayment of $380.00. In this instance two separate claims were paid in the same month for foster parent daycare. Each claim was below the total authorized monthly amount of $1,000 for this client. However, in total these two claims in the amounts of $600 and $780 exceeded the monthly authorized amount and the FACIS system allowed payment of both claims. • Inadequate Supporting Documentation Two claims were not adequately supported. These claims were for foster parent day care. Invoices attached to the CP-522 claim forms did not include provider names, dates of service, and/or the number of hours the child was in care. For one of these claims, the CP-522 claim form was not signed by the claimant but rather was signed by the DSS caseworker who also entered and approved the claim on the FACIS system. Cause: Controls in the FACIS system were not adequate to prevent the person entering a claim for payment in the system to also approve the claim for payment with no further review. For those claims that were subject to secondary review, no documentation of that review and approval was maintained in the system. Controls in the FACIS system were not adequate to prevent paying claims in excess of authorized monthly amounts when billed by more than one provider. Controls were not adequate to prevent paying claims without proper supporting documentation. Effect: As a result of these deficiencies, there was increased risk of improper payments being made from grant funds. Questioned Costs: $2,327.50. Further Information: A sample of 77 claims amounting to $95,309.52 was tested out of 14,024 total claims paid on the FACIS system during State Fiscal Year 2024. These claims were paid with a combination of Federal TANF and state general funds. The total dollar amount of claims paid for Emergency Assistance in FY24 was $14,127,248.26, of which $6,817,450.60 was Federal. Questioned costs reported include only the federal share of claims found to be improperly paid and/or improperly supported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: Yes. Recommendation: We recommend internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and approval of claims on the FACIS system. These controls should ensure that claim reviews and approvals are being performed by at least one individual other than the person entering the claim on the FACIS system. We also recommend adequate documentation be maintained to identify the individual who approved the claim and the date it was approved. We recommend that internal controls be strengthened within the FACIS system to prevent overpayments when multiple claims are submitted for the same services in any given month. We recommend that internal controls be strengthened to ensure that adequate documentation is obtained and retained to support the claims paid. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-005: Inadequate controls over the payment of claims. Type of Finding: Material Weakness Assistance Listing Title: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Assistance Listing Number: 93.558 Federal Award Numbers: 2201SDTANF, 2301SDTANF, 2401SDTANF Federal Award Years: 2022, 2023, 2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Activities Allowed or Unallowed Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 263.11(a)(2) allows states to use Federal TANF funds for emergency services “For which the State was authorized to use IV-A or IV-F funds under prior law, as in effect on September 30, 1995 (or, at the option of the State, August 21, 1996).” 45 CFR 75.303 requires the non-Federal entity to: (a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government,” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework,” issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). 45 CFR 75.403(g) requires costs to be adequately documented to be allowable under Federal awards. The Family and Child Information System (FACIS) is utilized to process TANF emergency assistance payments. Approximately $6.8 million in federal TANF emergency assistance claims were processed on the FACIS system during FY24. Chapter XIII of the FACIS Manual states: “Any claims entered on the New Claim Entry screen require supervisor approval before payment is made. The claims entered by Batch also require supervisor approval.” Condition: Out of 77 TANF emergency assistance paid claims tested, we identified the following: • Claim Approval There was no evidence on the FACIS system of more than one person being involved with the authorization or payment of 45 claims. Sixteen of these 45 claims were “batch” claims for monthly foster care maintenance type payments and there was no documentation of claim payment approval on the FACIS system. Twenty-three of these 45 claims were miscellaneous type claims with no documentation of claim payment approval on the FACIS system. These 39 claims were entered and paid prior to DSS adding a field on the FACIS system in January of 2024 to document claim payment approval. Six claims were paid after this field was added to the FACIS system in January of 2024 and were approved for payment by the same person that entered the claim. • Payment Exceeding Authorized Amount For one client, the monthly amount authorized for daycare was exceeded in the month related to the claim tested, resulting in an overpayment of $380.00. In this instance two separate claims were paid in the same month for foster parent daycare. Each claim was below the total authorized monthly amount of $1,000 for this client. However, in total these two claims in the amounts of $600 and $780 exceeded the monthly authorized amount and the FACIS system allowed payment of both claims. • Inadequate Supporting Documentation Two claims were not adequately supported. These claims were for foster parent day care. Invoices attached to the CP-522 claim forms did not include provider names, dates of service, and/or the number of hours the child was in care. For one of these claims, the CP-522 claim form was not signed by the claimant but rather was signed by the DSS caseworker who also entered and approved the claim on the FACIS system. Cause: Controls in the FACIS system were not adequate to prevent the person entering a claim for payment in the system to also approve the claim for payment with no further review. For those claims that were subject to secondary review, no documentation of that review and approval was maintained in the system. Controls in the FACIS system were not adequate to prevent paying claims in excess of authorized monthly amounts when billed by more than one provider. Controls were not adequate to prevent paying claims without proper supporting documentation. Effect: As a result of these deficiencies, there was increased risk of improper payments being made from grant funds. Questioned Costs: $2,327.50. Further Information: A sample of 77 claims amounting to $95,309.52 was tested out of 14,024 total claims paid on the FACIS system during State Fiscal Year 2024. These claims were paid with a combination of Federal TANF and state general funds. The total dollar amount of claims paid for Emergency Assistance in FY24 was $14,127,248.26, of which $6,817,450.60 was Federal. Questioned costs reported include only the federal share of claims found to be improperly paid and/or improperly supported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: Yes. Recommendation: We recommend internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and approval of claims on the FACIS system. These controls should ensure that claim reviews and approvals are being performed by at least one individual other than the person entering the claim on the FACIS system. We also recommend adequate documentation be maintained to identify the individual who approved the claim and the date it was approved. We recommend that internal controls be strengthened within the FACIS system to prevent overpayments when multiple claims are submitted for the same services in any given month. We recommend that internal controls be strengthened to ensure that adequate documentation is obtained and retained to support the claims paid. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-006: Inadequate Internal Controls over Special Tests and Provisions Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-compliance Assistance Listing Title: Medicaid Cluster (State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers, and Medical Assistance Program) Assistance Listing Numbers: 93.775, 93.777, 93.778 Federal Award Numbers: 2305SD5MAP, 2405SD5MAP Federal Award Years: FFY2023, FFY2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Special Tests and Provisions COVID-19 Funding: Cluster includes some COVID-19 funding to an existing program Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 95.605 defines automated data processing (ADP) as “data processing performed by a system of electronic or electrical machines so interconnected and interacting as to minimize the need for human assistance or intervention.” 45 CFR 95.621(f) states: (1) ADP System Security Requirement. State agencies are responsible for the security of all ADP projects under development, and operational systems involved in the administration of HHS programs. State agencies shall determine the appropriate ADP security requirements based on recognized industry standards or standards governing security of Federal ADP systems and information processing.” … . (3) ADP System Security Reviews. State agencies shall review the ADP system security of installations involved in the administration of HHS programs on a biennial basis. At a minimum, the reviews shall include an evaluation of physical and data security operating procedures, and personnel practices. Condition: The Department of Social Services (DSS) did not perform the required biennial ADP risk analysis and system security review in FY24. The last such review was completed in FY22. Cause: Controls were not adequate to ensure that the required ADP risk analysis and system security review was performed biennially. Effect: As a result of this control deficiency, the DSS was not in compliance with HHS requirements for performing ADP risk analysis and system security reviews. Without the required reviews the DSS was exposed to increased risk related to ADP system security and potential sanctions from the federal awarding agency. Questioned Costs: None reported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend that internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and completion of a biennial ADP system security review. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-006: Inadequate Internal Controls over Special Tests and Provisions Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-compliance Assistance Listing Title: Medicaid Cluster (State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers, and Medical Assistance Program) Assistance Listing Numbers: 93.775, 93.777, 93.778 Federal Award Numbers: 2305SD5MAP, 2405SD5MAP Federal Award Years: FFY2023, FFY2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Special Tests and Provisions COVID-19 Funding: Cluster includes some COVID-19 funding to an existing program Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 95.605 defines automated data processing (ADP) as “data processing performed by a system of electronic or electrical machines so interconnected and interacting as to minimize the need for human assistance or intervention.” 45 CFR 95.621(f) states: (1) ADP System Security Requirement. State agencies are responsible for the security of all ADP projects under development, and operational systems involved in the administration of HHS programs. State agencies shall determine the appropriate ADP security requirements based on recognized industry standards or standards governing security of Federal ADP systems and information processing.” … . (3) ADP System Security Reviews. State agencies shall review the ADP system security of installations involved in the administration of HHS programs on a biennial basis. At a minimum, the reviews shall include an evaluation of physical and data security operating procedures, and personnel practices. Condition: The Department of Social Services (DSS) did not perform the required biennial ADP risk analysis and system security review in FY24. The last such review was completed in FY22. Cause: Controls were not adequate to ensure that the required ADP risk analysis and system security review was performed biennially. Effect: As a result of this control deficiency, the DSS was not in compliance with HHS requirements for performing ADP risk analysis and system security reviews. Without the required reviews the DSS was exposed to increased risk related to ADP system security and potential sanctions from the federal awarding agency. Questioned Costs: None reported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend that internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and completion of a biennial ADP system security review. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-006: Inadequate Internal Controls over Special Tests and Provisions Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-compliance Assistance Listing Title: Medicaid Cluster (State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers, and Medical Assistance Program) Assistance Listing Numbers: 93.775, 93.777, 93.778 Federal Award Numbers: 2305SD5MAP, 2405SD5MAP Federal Award Years: FFY2023, FFY2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Special Tests and Provisions COVID-19 Funding: Cluster includes some COVID-19 funding to an existing program Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 95.605 defines automated data processing (ADP) as “data processing performed by a system of electronic or electrical machines so interconnected and interacting as to minimize the need for human assistance or intervention.” 45 CFR 95.621(f) states: (1) ADP System Security Requirement. State agencies are responsible for the security of all ADP projects under development, and operational systems involved in the administration of HHS programs. State agencies shall determine the appropriate ADP security requirements based on recognized industry standards or standards governing security of Federal ADP systems and information processing.” … . (3) ADP System Security Reviews. State agencies shall review the ADP system security of installations involved in the administration of HHS programs on a biennial basis. At a minimum, the reviews shall include an evaluation of physical and data security operating procedures, and personnel practices. Condition: The Department of Social Services (DSS) did not perform the required biennial ADP risk analysis and system security review in FY24. The last such review was completed in FY22. Cause: Controls were not adequate to ensure that the required ADP risk analysis and system security review was performed biennially. Effect: As a result of this control deficiency, the DSS was not in compliance with HHS requirements for performing ADP risk analysis and system security reviews. Without the required reviews the DSS was exposed to increased risk related to ADP system security and potential sanctions from the federal awarding agency. Questioned Costs: None reported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend that internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and completion of a biennial ADP system security review. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-006: Inadequate Internal Controls over Special Tests and Provisions Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-compliance Assistance Listing Title: Medicaid Cluster (State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers, and Medical Assistance Program) Assistance Listing Numbers: 93.775, 93.777, 93.778 Federal Award Numbers: 2305SD5MAP, 2405SD5MAP Federal Award Years: FFY2023, FFY2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Special Tests and Provisions COVID-19 Funding: Cluster includes some COVID-19 funding to an existing program Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 95.605 defines automated data processing (ADP) as “data processing performed by a system of electronic or electrical machines so interconnected and interacting as to minimize the need for human assistance or intervention.” 45 CFR 95.621(f) states: (1) ADP System Security Requirement. State agencies are responsible for the security of all ADP projects under development, and operational systems involved in the administration of HHS programs. State agencies shall determine the appropriate ADP security requirements based on recognized industry standards or standards governing security of Federal ADP systems and information processing.” … . (3) ADP System Security Reviews. State agencies shall review the ADP system security of installations involved in the administration of HHS programs on a biennial basis. At a minimum, the reviews shall include an evaluation of physical and data security operating procedures, and personnel practices. Condition: The Department of Social Services (DSS) did not perform the required biennial ADP risk analysis and system security review in FY24. The last such review was completed in FY22. Cause: Controls were not adequate to ensure that the required ADP risk analysis and system security review was performed biennially. Effect: As a result of this control deficiency, the DSS was not in compliance with HHS requirements for performing ADP risk analysis and system security reviews. Without the required reviews the DSS was exposed to increased risk related to ADP system security and potential sanctions from the federal awarding agency. Questioned Costs: None reported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend that internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and completion of a biennial ADP system security review. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-007: Inadequate Internal Controls over Monitoring of Subrecipient Audits Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-Compliance Assistance Listing Title: Disaster Grants - Public Assistance (Presidentially Declared Disasters) Assistance Listing Number: 97.036 Federal Award Number: 4155DRSDP00000001,4440DRSDP00000001, 4463DRSDP00000001, 4467DRSDP00000001, 4469DRSDP00000001, 4527DRSDP00000001, 4656DRSDP00000001, 4664DRSDP00000001, 4689DRSDP00000001, and 4718DRSDP00000001 Federal Award Year: 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 Federal Agency: Department of Homeland Security Category of Finding: Subrecipient Monitoring Criteria: 2 CFR section 200.332 requires, among other things, that a pass-through entity verify that subrecipients receive Single Audits as required by 2 CFR 200.501(a), follow-up to ensure that the subrecipient takes timely and appropriate action on audit findings, and issue a management decision on applicable audit findings pertaining to the subaward. 2 CFR 200.521(d) requires this management decision to be issued within six months of acceptance of the audit report by the Federal Audit Clearinghouse (FAC). Condition: The Department of Public Safety (DPS) receives funding under ALN 97.036, Disaster Grants - Public Assistance (Presidentially Declared Disasters) (Public Assistance) and makes subawards to local governments and private nonprofit entities to respond to and recover from presidentially declared disasters. During FY24, DPS did not have adequate controls in place to ensure that Single Audits were obtained for all applicable subrecipients within the required time frame, that those audits were reviewed to ensure timely and appropriate action was taken on any findings, and that a management decision was issued by DPS within the six-month time frame required by federal regulations. Based on our review of funding amounts passed through by DPS, there were seven subrecipients receiving Federal grant payments that would require a Single Audit for the auditee’s fiscal year 2023. These subrecipients had received the required audits and their audit reports were accepted by the FAC, however, two of the audits were not reviewed timely by DPS. Of those two subrecipient audits, one had an audit finding pertaining to the Public Assistance program and DPS had not issued a management decision within the time frame required by 2 CFR 200.521. Cause: Controls were not adequate to identify when subrecipient audits were due and obtain all required audits off the FAC in a timely manner. While DPS personnel did track expenditures to determine which subrecipients were required to have audits under 2 CFR 200.501(a), failure to monitor subrecipient year-ends and the related audit deadlines resulted in some audits not being obtained and reviewed in a timely manner. Effect: This resulted in noncompliance with subrecipient monitoring requirements and increased the risk of subrecipient audit findings not being corrected in a timely manner. Questioned Costs: None. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend the Department implement controls to ensure that audits of subrecipients are obtained and followed up on in a timely manner and that management decisions are issued within the required time frame for all audit findings pertaining to DPS subawards. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Public Safety concurs with the audit finding.
Finding No. 2024-008: Unallowable cost reimbursement under the Highway Planning and Construction Program Type of Finding: Noncompliance Assistance Listing Title: Highway Planning and Construction Program Assistance Listing Number: 20.205 Federal Award Number: 693JJ22230000Y236SD2042029 Federal Award Year: 2022 Federal Agency: Department of Transportation Category of Finding: Activities Allowed or Unallowed Criteria: Title 23 of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 1.9(a) states: Federal-aid funds shall not participate in any cost which is not incurred in conformity with applicable Federal and State law, the regulations in this title, and policies and procedures prescribed by the Administrator. Federal funds shall not be paid on account of any cost incurred prior to authorization by the Administrator to the State highway department to proceed with the project or part thereof involving such cost. Condition: Construction costs on projects performed under the Highway Planning and Construction program are tracked using a Construction Pay Estimate (CPE). Costs included in a project but not related to the federal portion of the project are coded on the CPE as “nonparticipating”. Projects may be broken into different segments and tracked under different project numbers but still have costs accumulated together on one CPE. In such instances, a manual process is necessary to break out nonparticipating costs when costs are posted to the Construction Billing system for reimbursement. A federal reimbursement of Project Number NH 2042(29) PCN 06YQ included CPE 28 totaling $955,373.74 in costs for the period. Of these costs, $21,625.00 were related to “Concrete Sidewalk” and were coded as “nonparticipating”. When posting the expenditures to the Construction Billing system, the accountant erroneously used the total CPE expenditures instead of the “participating” federal portion of $933,748.74 resulting in $21,625 in “nonparticipating” costs being charged to the program. Projects are paid according to the approved bid and federal reimbursements may only be drawn up to the federal award amount. After a project is completed, a review is performed to reconcile costs incurred to the awarded amount, as modified by Construction Change Orders, and federal reimbursements. During this process, the error identified during the audit would have likely been caught and corrected. Cause: System limitations and human error led to this finding. Effect: As a result, there was improper reimbursement of federal funds for nonparticipating costs and an increased risk that the improper reimbursement would not be properly identified and corrected during subsequent project closeout. Questioned Costs: $17,721.69 Further Information: The questioned costs above were calculated by multiplying the nonparticipating portion of project costs by the project’s federal participation rate of 81.95%. An error rate of .013% was calculated by dividing the $17,721.69 found to be in error by the $140,595,557.09 total dollar amount of reimbursements tested. This error rate was then applied to untested reimbursements of $393,336,560 resulting in total projected errors of $49,579.00. Recommendation: We recommend nonparticipating costs drawn be credited back to the federal project and future nonparticipating costs not be claimed for reimbursement. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Transportation concurs with the audit finding.
Finding No. 2024-005: Inadequate controls over the payment of claims. Type of Finding: Material Weakness Assistance Listing Title: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Assistance Listing Number: 93.558 Federal Award Numbers: 2201SDTANF, 2301SDTANF, 2401SDTANF Federal Award Years: 2022, 2023, 2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Activities Allowed or Unallowed Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 263.11(a)(2) allows states to use Federal TANF funds for emergency services “For which the State was authorized to use IV-A or IV-F funds under prior law, as in effect on September 30, 1995 (or, at the option of the State, August 21, 1996).” 45 CFR 75.303 requires the non-Federal entity to: (a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government,” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework,” issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). 45 CFR 75.403(g) requires costs to be adequately documented to be allowable under Federal awards. The Family and Child Information System (FACIS) is utilized to process TANF emergency assistance payments. Approximately $6.8 million in federal TANF emergency assistance claims were processed on the FACIS system during FY24. Chapter XIII of the FACIS Manual states: “Any claims entered on the New Claim Entry screen require supervisor approval before payment is made. The claims entered by Batch also require supervisor approval.” Condition: Out of 77 TANF emergency assistance paid claims tested, we identified the following: • Claim Approval There was no evidence on the FACIS system of more than one person being involved with the authorization or payment of 45 claims. Sixteen of these 45 claims were “batch” claims for monthly foster care maintenance type payments and there was no documentation of claim payment approval on the FACIS system. Twenty-three of these 45 claims were miscellaneous type claims with no documentation of claim payment approval on the FACIS system. These 39 claims were entered and paid prior to DSS adding a field on the FACIS system in January of 2024 to document claim payment approval. Six claims were paid after this field was added to the FACIS system in January of 2024 and were approved for payment by the same person that entered the claim. • Payment Exceeding Authorized Amount For one client, the monthly amount authorized for daycare was exceeded in the month related to the claim tested, resulting in an overpayment of $380.00. In this instance two separate claims were paid in the same month for foster parent daycare. Each claim was below the total authorized monthly amount of $1,000 for this client. However, in total these two claims in the amounts of $600 and $780 exceeded the monthly authorized amount and the FACIS system allowed payment of both claims. • Inadequate Supporting Documentation Two claims were not adequately supported. These claims were for foster parent day care. Invoices attached to the CP-522 claim forms did not include provider names, dates of service, and/or the number of hours the child was in care. For one of these claims, the CP-522 claim form was not signed by the claimant but rather was signed by the DSS caseworker who also entered and approved the claim on the FACIS system. Cause: Controls in the FACIS system were not adequate to prevent the person entering a claim for payment in the system to also approve the claim for payment with no further review. For those claims that were subject to secondary review, no documentation of that review and approval was maintained in the system. Controls in the FACIS system were not adequate to prevent paying claims in excess of authorized monthly amounts when billed by more than one provider. Controls were not adequate to prevent paying claims without proper supporting documentation. Effect: As a result of these deficiencies, there was increased risk of improper payments being made from grant funds. Questioned Costs: $2,327.50. Further Information: A sample of 77 claims amounting to $95,309.52 was tested out of 14,024 total claims paid on the FACIS system during State Fiscal Year 2024. These claims were paid with a combination of Federal TANF and state general funds. The total dollar amount of claims paid for Emergency Assistance in FY24 was $14,127,248.26, of which $6,817,450.60 was Federal. Questioned costs reported include only the federal share of claims found to be improperly paid and/or improperly supported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: Yes. Recommendation: We recommend internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and approval of claims on the FACIS system. These controls should ensure that claim reviews and approvals are being performed by at least one individual other than the person entering the claim on the FACIS system. We also recommend adequate documentation be maintained to identify the individual who approved the claim and the date it was approved. We recommend that internal controls be strengthened within the FACIS system to prevent overpayments when multiple claims are submitted for the same services in any given month. We recommend that internal controls be strengthened to ensure that adequate documentation is obtained and retained to support the claims paid. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-005: Inadequate controls over the payment of claims. Type of Finding: Material Weakness Assistance Listing Title: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Assistance Listing Number: 93.558 Federal Award Numbers: 2201SDTANF, 2301SDTANF, 2401SDTANF Federal Award Years: 2022, 2023, 2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Activities Allowed or Unallowed Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 263.11(a)(2) allows states to use Federal TANF funds for emergency services “For which the State was authorized to use IV-A or IV-F funds under prior law, as in effect on September 30, 1995 (or, at the option of the State, August 21, 1996).” 45 CFR 75.303 requires the non-Federal entity to: (a) Establish and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the non-Federal entity is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal award. These internal controls should be in compliance with guidance in “Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government,” issued by the Comptroller General of the United States or the “Internal Control Integrated Framework,” issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). 45 CFR 75.403(g) requires costs to be adequately documented to be allowable under Federal awards. The Family and Child Information System (FACIS) is utilized to process TANF emergency assistance payments. Approximately $6.8 million in federal TANF emergency assistance claims were processed on the FACIS system during FY24. Chapter XIII of the FACIS Manual states: “Any claims entered on the New Claim Entry screen require supervisor approval before payment is made. The claims entered by Batch also require supervisor approval.” Condition: Out of 77 TANF emergency assistance paid claims tested, we identified the following: • Claim Approval There was no evidence on the FACIS system of more than one person being involved with the authorization or payment of 45 claims. Sixteen of these 45 claims were “batch” claims for monthly foster care maintenance type payments and there was no documentation of claim payment approval on the FACIS system. Twenty-three of these 45 claims were miscellaneous type claims with no documentation of claim payment approval on the FACIS system. These 39 claims were entered and paid prior to DSS adding a field on the FACIS system in January of 2024 to document claim payment approval. Six claims were paid after this field was added to the FACIS system in January of 2024 and were approved for payment by the same person that entered the claim. • Payment Exceeding Authorized Amount For one client, the monthly amount authorized for daycare was exceeded in the month related to the claim tested, resulting in an overpayment of $380.00. In this instance two separate claims were paid in the same month for foster parent daycare. Each claim was below the total authorized monthly amount of $1,000 for this client. However, in total these two claims in the amounts of $600 and $780 exceeded the monthly authorized amount and the FACIS system allowed payment of both claims. • Inadequate Supporting Documentation Two claims were not adequately supported. These claims were for foster parent day care. Invoices attached to the CP-522 claim forms did not include provider names, dates of service, and/or the number of hours the child was in care. For one of these claims, the CP-522 claim form was not signed by the claimant but rather was signed by the DSS caseworker who also entered and approved the claim on the FACIS system. Cause: Controls in the FACIS system were not adequate to prevent the person entering a claim for payment in the system to also approve the claim for payment with no further review. For those claims that were subject to secondary review, no documentation of that review and approval was maintained in the system. Controls in the FACIS system were not adequate to prevent paying claims in excess of authorized monthly amounts when billed by more than one provider. Controls were not adequate to prevent paying claims without proper supporting documentation. Effect: As a result of these deficiencies, there was increased risk of improper payments being made from grant funds. Questioned Costs: $2,327.50. Further Information: A sample of 77 claims amounting to $95,309.52 was tested out of 14,024 total claims paid on the FACIS system during State Fiscal Year 2024. These claims were paid with a combination of Federal TANF and state general funds. The total dollar amount of claims paid for Emergency Assistance in FY24 was $14,127,248.26, of which $6,817,450.60 was Federal. Questioned costs reported include only the federal share of claims found to be improperly paid and/or improperly supported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: Yes. Recommendation: We recommend internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and approval of claims on the FACIS system. These controls should ensure that claim reviews and approvals are being performed by at least one individual other than the person entering the claim on the FACIS system. We also recommend adequate documentation be maintained to identify the individual who approved the claim and the date it was approved. We recommend that internal controls be strengthened within the FACIS system to prevent overpayments when multiple claims are submitted for the same services in any given month. We recommend that internal controls be strengthened to ensure that adequate documentation is obtained and retained to support the claims paid. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-006: Inadequate Internal Controls over Special Tests and Provisions Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-compliance Assistance Listing Title: Medicaid Cluster (State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers, and Medical Assistance Program) Assistance Listing Numbers: 93.775, 93.777, 93.778 Federal Award Numbers: 2305SD5MAP, 2405SD5MAP Federal Award Years: FFY2023, FFY2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Special Tests and Provisions COVID-19 Funding: Cluster includes some COVID-19 funding to an existing program Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 95.605 defines automated data processing (ADP) as “data processing performed by a system of electronic or electrical machines so interconnected and interacting as to minimize the need for human assistance or intervention.” 45 CFR 95.621(f) states: (1) ADP System Security Requirement. State agencies are responsible for the security of all ADP projects under development, and operational systems involved in the administration of HHS programs. State agencies shall determine the appropriate ADP security requirements based on recognized industry standards or standards governing security of Federal ADP systems and information processing.” … . (3) ADP System Security Reviews. State agencies shall review the ADP system security of installations involved in the administration of HHS programs on a biennial basis. At a minimum, the reviews shall include an evaluation of physical and data security operating procedures, and personnel practices. Condition: The Department of Social Services (DSS) did not perform the required biennial ADP risk analysis and system security review in FY24. The last such review was completed in FY22. Cause: Controls were not adequate to ensure that the required ADP risk analysis and system security review was performed biennially. Effect: As a result of this control deficiency, the DSS was not in compliance with HHS requirements for performing ADP risk analysis and system security reviews. Without the required reviews the DSS was exposed to increased risk related to ADP system security and potential sanctions from the federal awarding agency. Questioned Costs: None reported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend that internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and completion of a biennial ADP system security review. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-006: Inadequate Internal Controls over Special Tests and Provisions Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-compliance Assistance Listing Title: Medicaid Cluster (State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers, and Medical Assistance Program) Assistance Listing Numbers: 93.775, 93.777, 93.778 Federal Award Numbers: 2305SD5MAP, 2405SD5MAP Federal Award Years: FFY2023, FFY2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Special Tests and Provisions COVID-19 Funding: Cluster includes some COVID-19 funding to an existing program Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 95.605 defines automated data processing (ADP) as “data processing performed by a system of electronic or electrical machines so interconnected and interacting as to minimize the need for human assistance or intervention.” 45 CFR 95.621(f) states: (1) ADP System Security Requirement. State agencies are responsible for the security of all ADP projects under development, and operational systems involved in the administration of HHS programs. State agencies shall determine the appropriate ADP security requirements based on recognized industry standards or standards governing security of Federal ADP systems and information processing.” … . (3) ADP System Security Reviews. State agencies shall review the ADP system security of installations involved in the administration of HHS programs on a biennial basis. At a minimum, the reviews shall include an evaluation of physical and data security operating procedures, and personnel practices. Condition: The Department of Social Services (DSS) did not perform the required biennial ADP risk analysis and system security review in FY24. The last such review was completed in FY22. Cause: Controls were not adequate to ensure that the required ADP risk analysis and system security review was performed biennially. Effect: As a result of this control deficiency, the DSS was not in compliance with HHS requirements for performing ADP risk analysis and system security reviews. Without the required reviews the DSS was exposed to increased risk related to ADP system security and potential sanctions from the federal awarding agency. Questioned Costs: None reported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend that internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and completion of a biennial ADP system security review. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-006: Inadequate Internal Controls over Special Tests and Provisions Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-compliance Assistance Listing Title: Medicaid Cluster (State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers, and Medical Assistance Program) Assistance Listing Numbers: 93.775, 93.777, 93.778 Federal Award Numbers: 2305SD5MAP, 2405SD5MAP Federal Award Years: FFY2023, FFY2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Special Tests and Provisions COVID-19 Funding: Cluster includes some COVID-19 funding to an existing program Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 95.605 defines automated data processing (ADP) as “data processing performed by a system of electronic or electrical machines so interconnected and interacting as to minimize the need for human assistance or intervention.” 45 CFR 95.621(f) states: (1) ADP System Security Requirement. State agencies are responsible for the security of all ADP projects under development, and operational systems involved in the administration of HHS programs. State agencies shall determine the appropriate ADP security requirements based on recognized industry standards or standards governing security of Federal ADP systems and information processing.” … . (3) ADP System Security Reviews. State agencies shall review the ADP system security of installations involved in the administration of HHS programs on a biennial basis. At a minimum, the reviews shall include an evaluation of physical and data security operating procedures, and personnel practices. Condition: The Department of Social Services (DSS) did not perform the required biennial ADP risk analysis and system security review in FY24. The last such review was completed in FY22. Cause: Controls were not adequate to ensure that the required ADP risk analysis and system security review was performed biennially. Effect: As a result of this control deficiency, the DSS was not in compliance with HHS requirements for performing ADP risk analysis and system security reviews. Without the required reviews the DSS was exposed to increased risk related to ADP system security and potential sanctions from the federal awarding agency. Questioned Costs: None reported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend that internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and completion of a biennial ADP system security review. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-006: Inadequate Internal Controls over Special Tests and Provisions Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-compliance Assistance Listing Title: Medicaid Cluster (State Medicaid Fraud Control Units, State Survey and Certification of Health Care Providers and Suppliers, and Medical Assistance Program) Assistance Listing Numbers: 93.775, 93.777, 93.778 Federal Award Numbers: 2305SD5MAP, 2405SD5MAP Federal Award Years: FFY2023, FFY2024 Federal Agency: Department of Health and Human Services Category of Finding: Special Tests and Provisions COVID-19 Funding: Cluster includes some COVID-19 funding to an existing program Criteria: Title 45 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Section 95.605 defines automated data processing (ADP) as “data processing performed by a system of electronic or electrical machines so interconnected and interacting as to minimize the need for human assistance or intervention.” 45 CFR 95.621(f) states: (1) ADP System Security Requirement. State agencies are responsible for the security of all ADP projects under development, and operational systems involved in the administration of HHS programs. State agencies shall determine the appropriate ADP security requirements based on recognized industry standards or standards governing security of Federal ADP systems and information processing.” … . (3) ADP System Security Reviews. State agencies shall review the ADP system security of installations involved in the administration of HHS programs on a biennial basis. At a minimum, the reviews shall include an evaluation of physical and data security operating procedures, and personnel practices. Condition: The Department of Social Services (DSS) did not perform the required biennial ADP risk analysis and system security review in FY24. The last such review was completed in FY22. Cause: Controls were not adequate to ensure that the required ADP risk analysis and system security review was performed biennially. Effect: As a result of this control deficiency, the DSS was not in compliance with HHS requirements for performing ADP risk analysis and system security reviews. Without the required reviews the DSS was exposed to increased risk related to ADP system security and potential sanctions from the federal awarding agency. Questioned Costs: None reported. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend that internal controls be strengthened over the initiation and completion of a biennial ADP system security review. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Social Services concurs with the finding.
Finding No. 2024-007: Inadequate Internal Controls over Monitoring of Subrecipient Audits Type of Finding: Significant Deficiency and Non-Compliance Assistance Listing Title: Disaster Grants - Public Assistance (Presidentially Declared Disasters) Assistance Listing Number: 97.036 Federal Award Number: 4155DRSDP00000001,4440DRSDP00000001, 4463DRSDP00000001, 4467DRSDP00000001, 4469DRSDP00000001, 4527DRSDP00000001, 4656DRSDP00000001, 4664DRSDP00000001, 4689DRSDP00000001, and 4718DRSDP00000001 Federal Award Year: 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 Federal Agency: Department of Homeland Security Category of Finding: Subrecipient Monitoring Criteria: 2 CFR section 200.332 requires, among other things, that a pass-through entity verify that subrecipients receive Single Audits as required by 2 CFR 200.501(a), follow-up to ensure that the subrecipient takes timely and appropriate action on audit findings, and issue a management decision on applicable audit findings pertaining to the subaward. 2 CFR 200.521(d) requires this management decision to be issued within six months of acceptance of the audit report by the Federal Audit Clearinghouse (FAC). Condition: The Department of Public Safety (DPS) receives funding under ALN 97.036, Disaster Grants - Public Assistance (Presidentially Declared Disasters) (Public Assistance) and makes subawards to local governments and private nonprofit entities to respond to and recover from presidentially declared disasters. During FY24, DPS did not have adequate controls in place to ensure that Single Audits were obtained for all applicable subrecipients within the required time frame, that those audits were reviewed to ensure timely and appropriate action was taken on any findings, and that a management decision was issued by DPS within the six-month time frame required by federal regulations. Based on our review of funding amounts passed through by DPS, there were seven subrecipients receiving Federal grant payments that would require a Single Audit for the auditee’s fiscal year 2023. These subrecipients had received the required audits and their audit reports were accepted by the FAC, however, two of the audits were not reviewed timely by DPS. Of those two subrecipient audits, one had an audit finding pertaining to the Public Assistance program and DPS had not issued a management decision within the time frame required by 2 CFR 200.521. Cause: Controls were not adequate to identify when subrecipient audits were due and obtain all required audits off the FAC in a timely manner. While DPS personnel did track expenditures to determine which subrecipients were required to have audits under 2 CFR 200.501(a), failure to monitor subrecipient year-ends and the related audit deadlines resulted in some audits not being obtained and reviewed in a timely manner. Effect: This resulted in noncompliance with subrecipient monitoring requirements and increased the risk of subrecipient audit findings not being corrected in a timely manner. Questioned Costs: None. Repeat Finding from Prior Year: No. Recommendation: We recommend the Department implement controls to ensure that audits of subrecipients are obtained and followed up on in a timely manner and that management decisions are issued within the required time frame for all audit findings pertaining to DPS subawards. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Public Safety concurs with the audit finding.
Finding No. 2024-008: Unallowable cost reimbursement under the Highway Planning and Construction Program Type of Finding: Noncompliance Assistance Listing Title: Highway Planning and Construction Program Assistance Listing Number: 20.205 Federal Award Number: 693JJ22230000Y236SD2042029 Federal Award Year: 2022 Federal Agency: Department of Transportation Category of Finding: Activities Allowed or Unallowed Criteria: Title 23 of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 1.9(a) states: Federal-aid funds shall not participate in any cost which is not incurred in conformity with applicable Federal and State law, the regulations in this title, and policies and procedures prescribed by the Administrator. Federal funds shall not be paid on account of any cost incurred prior to authorization by the Administrator to the State highway department to proceed with the project or part thereof involving such cost. Condition: Construction costs on projects performed under the Highway Planning and Construction program are tracked using a Construction Pay Estimate (CPE). Costs included in a project but not related to the federal portion of the project are coded on the CPE as “nonparticipating”. Projects may be broken into different segments and tracked under different project numbers but still have costs accumulated together on one CPE. In such instances, a manual process is necessary to break out nonparticipating costs when costs are posted to the Construction Billing system for reimbursement. A federal reimbursement of Project Number NH 2042(29) PCN 06YQ included CPE 28 totaling $955,373.74 in costs for the period. Of these costs, $21,625.00 were related to “Concrete Sidewalk” and were coded as “nonparticipating”. When posting the expenditures to the Construction Billing system, the accountant erroneously used the total CPE expenditures instead of the “participating” federal portion of $933,748.74 resulting in $21,625 in “nonparticipating” costs being charged to the program. Projects are paid according to the approved bid and federal reimbursements may only be drawn up to the federal award amount. After a project is completed, a review is performed to reconcile costs incurred to the awarded amount, as modified by Construction Change Orders, and federal reimbursements. During this process, the error identified during the audit would have likely been caught and corrected. Cause: System limitations and human error led to this finding. Effect: As a result, there was improper reimbursement of federal funds for nonparticipating costs and an increased risk that the improper reimbursement would not be properly identified and corrected during subsequent project closeout. Questioned Costs: $17,721.69 Further Information: The questioned costs above were calculated by multiplying the nonparticipating portion of project costs by the project’s federal participation rate of 81.95%. An error rate of .013% was calculated by dividing the $17,721.69 found to be in error by the $140,595,557.09 total dollar amount of reimbursements tested. This error rate was then applied to untested reimbursements of $393,336,560 resulting in total projected errors of $49,579.00. Recommendation: We recommend nonparticipating costs drawn be credited back to the federal project and future nonparticipating costs not be claimed for reimbursement. Views of Responsible Officials: The Department of Transportation concurs with the audit finding.