Corrective Action Plans

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Prior to the completion of this audit, EmployIndy already made a number of changes to its financial operations. It parted ways with its Chief Financial Officer and procured the services of an outside Certified Public Accounting firm to begin the process of reviewing and updating its financial operat...
Prior to the completion of this audit, EmployIndy already made a number of changes to its financial operations. It parted ways with its Chief Financial Officer and procured the services of an outside Certified Public Accounting firm to begin the process of reviewing and updating its financial operations. In addition, it recently hired an Executive Vice President of Finance and Operations to lead the final development and implementation of updated financial processes. The Executive Vice President of Finance and Operations has worked with EmployIndy’s Board of Directors and Finance Committee to document a plan for improving EmployIndy’s financial operations across the board by the 2nd quarter of Calendar Year 2024. As part of the improvement to financial operations, EmployIndy will provide updated training to all staff covering the proper process for submitting, reviewing, approving, and retaining supporting documents for expenditures. The existing procedure includes a multi-step review and approval process for all expenditures, including those in the WIOA and other federal funding clusters. Additionally, EmployIndy’s Financial Operations, Grants & Contracts, and Program Management teams will provide guidance and training to EmployIndy’s subrecipients and contractors covering the proper process for submitting supporting documentation with invoices or accrued expenditure reports. These documentation requirements will ensure that supporting information directly and clearly ties back to invoices and/or accrued expense reports.
View Audit 7960 Questioned Costs: $1
Prior to the completion of this audit, EmployIndy already made a number of changes to its financial operations. It parted ways with its Chief Financial Officer and procured the services of an outside Certified Public Accounting firm to begin the process of reviewing and updating its financial operat...
Prior to the completion of this audit, EmployIndy already made a number of changes to its financial operations. It parted ways with its Chief Financial Officer and procured the services of an outside Certified Public Accounting firm to begin the process of reviewing and updating its financial operations. In addition, it recently hired an Executive Vice President of Finance and Operations to lead the final development and implementation of updated financial processes. The Executive Vice President of Finance and Operations has worked with EmployIndy’s Board of Directors and Finance Committee to document a plan for improving EmployIndy’s financial operations across the board by the 2nd quarter of Calendar Year 2024. As part of the plan to improve its financial operations, EmployIndy staff and WIOA subrecipients will be retrained to submit accrued expenditure reports and invoices with supporting documentation in a timely manner to ensure that WIOA expenditures are quickly and accurately documented in order to support drawdowns. Further, EmployIndy’s Financial Operations staff, led by EmployIndy’s Controller, will complete monthly reconciliations and financial closeouts in a more timely manner to ensure that drawdowns are supported by documented, allowable expenses that WIOA funds will reimburse. Finally, EmployIndy’s Controller will ensure that any WIOA drawdowns that are based upon estimated expenditures are reconciled with documented, allowable expenditures within the financial management system on a monthly basis. This will ensure that documentation within the financial management system accurately matches annual WIOA drawdown amounts, and that there will be little to no deferred revenue for WIOA and other federal funding clusters.
Uniform Grant Guidance Implementation Recommendation: We recommend the County complete an assessment of its financial management system and related internal controls over federal awards during the 2023 fiscal year. This assessment should include an evaluation of existing policies and proceudres to d...
Uniform Grant Guidance Implementation Recommendation: We recommend the County complete an assessment of its financial management system and related internal controls over federal awards during the 2023 fiscal year. This assessment should include an evaluation of existing policies and proceudres to determine where additional enhancements should be made or new policies created, a plan to communicate these policies to County employees, and procedures ot periodically review an dupdate, as considered necessary. Explanation of disagreement with audit finding: There is no disagrement with the audit finding. Action planned/taken in response to finding: The County started to implement additional procedures and controls during the year ended December 31, 2018 related to Uniform Guidance, but never completed the process. The County will continue to evaluate current policies and improve them to be in compliance with Uniform Guidance. In addition, the County is contracting with CLA to gain additional understanding and training for department personnel on UG requirements. Name(s) of the contact person(s) responsible for correction action: Kourtney Erickson Planned completion date for corrective action: December 31, 2023
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.658 Foster Care – Title IV-E 93.658 COVID-19 Foster Care - Title IV-E Agency: Department of Child Safety Name of contact person and title: Emilio Gonzales, Audit Administrator Completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department w...
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.658 Foster Care – Title IV-E 93.658 COVID-19 Foster Care - Title IV-E Agency: Department of Child Safety Name of contact person and title: Emilio Gonzales, Audit Administrator Completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department will comply with the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA) and federal Uniform Guidance regulations in accordance with the Department’s Grant policies and procedures that include: • Identifying all subrecipient expenditure reports required for FFATA reporting. • Developing an expenditure template for the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Subaward Reporting System (FSRS). • Reporting the subrecipient expenditures in the FFATA Subaward Reporting System no later than month-end of the month following the subaward action. • Providing initial and annual training(s) to identified staff about FFATA Subaward expenditure submission. • Confirming FFATA Subaward Reporting System submission.
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.658 Foster Care – Title IV-E 93.658 COVID-19 Foster Care – Title IV-E Agency: Department of Child Safety Name of contact person and title: Emilio Gonzales, Audit Administrator Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The...
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.658 Foster Care – Title IV-E 93.658 COVID-19 Foster Care – Title IV-E Agency: Department of Child Safety Name of contact person and title: Emilio Gonzales, Audit Administrator Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department will monitor its subrecipients and their compliance with the award terms and program requirements in accordance with the Department’s Grant policies and procedures for risk evaluation, monitoring, actions and subrecipient follow up requirements that include: • Updating Subrecipient Monitoring Policies and Procedures. • Modifying the current interagency agreement to include requirements for subrecipient risk assessments and monitoring activities. • Conducting annual subrecipient risk assessments. • Completing monitoring plans for low, high and moderate subrecipients. • Providing quarterly training and/or technical assistance to subrecipients specific to areas of concern identified in the risk assessment. • Completing on-site reviews and audits, as necessary. • Reviewing the findings of the subrecipients’ single audits. • Requesting subrecipients complete a corrective action plan for any identified areas of concern as a result of identified single audit findings. • Monitoring subrecipients corrective action plans to determine if the areas of concern were resolved and if continued funding is appropriate. • Ensuring Grant policies and procedures are available to all subrecipients. • Maintaining monitoring documentation including risk assessments, corrective action, results and any action taken by the Department.
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.658 Foster Care – Title IV-E Agency: Department of Child Safety Name of contact person and title: Tanya Abdellatif, Assistant Director Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2025 Agency’s Response: Concur Department will ensure background checks for ch...
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.658 Foster Care – Title IV-E Agency: Department of Child Safety Name of contact person and title: Tanya Abdellatif, Assistant Director Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2025 Agency’s Response: Concur Department will ensure background checks for childcare institutions’ employees are completed prior to their hire date by: • Reviewing and amending DCS 15-32 Background Checks – Child Welfare Agency Staff policy and procedures to clarify that Child Welfare Agencies shall request and receive results for DCS Central Registry background checks prior to employment/date of hire. • Revising the Personnel File Monitoring Tool for licensing to include language that background checks need to be completed prior to hire and ensure all Child Welfare Licensing staff are utilizing the updated checklist. • Implementing, as part of the Quarterly Site Visit Process for childcare institutions, a process to review backgrounds checks to identify opportunities for improvement, trends and establish actions (countermeasures) to resolve any areas of concern. Hiring processes for each agency will also be reviewed during the quarterly site visits. • Providing updates related to policies and procedures during Quarterly Provider Meetings for childcare institutions, implementing monthly provider calls/meetings and conducting monthly unit/team meetings for Department. • Presenting the safety requirement expectations related to background checks for employees to childcare institutions and how the safety requirements are necessary for foster care maintenance payments at a quarterly meeting. • Conducting monthly monitoring of childcare institutions’ compliance with safety requirement expectations (background checks) for new and existing employees for fiscal year 2023.
Finding 5955 (2022-112)
Significant Deficiency 2022
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.568 Low-Income Home Energy Assistance 93.568 COVID-19 Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Molly Bright, DCAD Assistant Director Anticipated completion date: December 31, 2023 Agency...
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.568 Low-Income Home Energy Assistance 93.568 COVID-19 Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Molly Bright, DCAD Assistant Director Anticipated completion date: December 31, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department of Economic Security will address the audit recommendations, as follows: 1. Spend no more than the maximum 15 percent of program monies for weatherization or other energy-related home repairs. The Department will ensure that LIHEAP funds are allocated appropriately, and will confirm that no more than 15% of the total grant award is allocated for use in weatherization efforts or other energy-related home repairs. The Department constructs a detailed working budget document that is utilized for establishing the proper allocation of federal LIHEAP funding for each grant year. The finance team monitors this established budget to verify and corroborate its validity. The finance team will continue to monitor the LIHEAP budget, but will also improve its engagement with the Department’s programmatic staff to ensure sustained monitoring of the LIHEAP grant and expenditure earmarks. 2. Train newer staff administering the program on the program’s weatherization limitation and on the Division’s policies and procedures to review and approve expenditures considering this limitation. The Department has and will continue to host training sessions with all staff members, existing and new, to ensure awareness of and compliance with the 15% funding allocation restriction on weatherization related costs. The Department’s LIHEAP Policies and Procedures Manual have been shared and discussed with the programmatic staff, with a strong focus placed on the weatherization allocation cap. New procedures and Chart of Accounts elements have been created as a result of this finding to guarantee future compliance with the grant restrictions. 3. Enable the feature in the State’s accounting system to alert the Division of an award’s expenditures approaching the limitation to help ensure the Division does not exceed the weatherization limitation when spending program monies. Prior to the fiscal year 2022 Single Audit, the Department was not utilizing the State’s accounting system to budget weatherization separately for a program period year associated with LIHEAP. This procedure has changed effective immediately, allowing for improved tracking and reviewing of the LIHEAP grant spending guidelines. Additionally, it provides the Department with the ability to verify that the allocation of funding for weatherization efforts does not exceed the LIHEAP grant weatherization limitation. 4. Work with U.S. DHHS to resolve the $211,026 the Division overspent for weatherization or other energy-related home repairs, which may involve returning monies to the federal agency. The Department will collaborate with the U.S. DHHS to determine an appropriate course of action.
View Audit 7884 Questioned Costs: $1
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.558 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families 93.558 COVID-19 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Molly Bright, DCAD Assistant Director Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2...
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.558 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families 93.558 COVID-19 Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Molly Bright, DCAD Assistant Director Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department will stop the reimbursement of costs to all nonprofit and contracted subrecipients for items that are disallowed and/or restricted by the regulations provided within the provisions of the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) grant received by the Department. Additionally, the Department will obtain all supporting documentation needed to ensure compliance with these regulations prior to disbursing any TANF funding to any subrecipient for the purpose of reimbursement or programmatic funding. The Department will also update its policies and procedures for subrecipient monitoring. Furthermore, detailed training for the Department personnel responsible for reviewing and approving subrecipient reimbursement requests will be provided to ensure personnel are capable of identifying costs that are unallowable under federal regulations. The Department will assess the risk of noncompliance violations for each subrecipient and establish a plan of action to address noncompliance. The plan of action will include an array of training and educational processes to ensure applicable personnel are knowledgeable of TANF compliance requirements and Department contracts. The Department will also monitor subrecipients per updated policies and procedures. The Department will continue to resolve the unallowable costs reimbursed to subrecipients as deemed appropriate by the United States Department of Health and Human Services.
View Audit 7884 Questioned Costs: $1
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.268 COVID-19 Immunization Cooperative Agreements 93.323 COVD-19 Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases Agency: Department of Health Services Name of contact person and title: Lora Andrikopoulous, Grants Administrator Anticipated co...
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.268 COVID-19 Immunization Cooperative Agreements 93.323 COVD-19 Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases Agency: Department of Health Services Name of contact person and title: Lora Andrikopoulous, Grants Administrator Anticipated completion date: March 31, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur ADHS will work with the Financial Services Assurance Team, Procurement, Finance Managers, Other internal partners, and Grants to update the process of Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA). The process moving forward will include a communication plan, updates to standard work, creation of new standard work, and additional training.
Finding 5945 (2022-128)
Significant Deficiency 2022
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.778 Medical Assistance Program (Medicaid Title XIX) Agency: Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) Name of contact person and title: Jeff Tegen, Assistant Director, AHCCCS Division of Budget and Finance Anticipated completion date: Decembe...
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.778 Medical Assistance Program (Medicaid Title XIX) Agency: Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) Name of contact person and title: Jeff Tegen, Assistant Director, AHCCCS Division of Budget and Finance Anticipated completion date: December 31, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur In early 2023, AHCCCS completed a staffing analysis which determined additional needed staffing as follows: 1 manager, 3 supervisors, 17 staff investigator positions; permanent funding for 10 time limited investigator positions. In addition, to address workload and costs structurally, AHCCCS is pursuing potential opportunities to partner with contracted Managed Care Organizations (MCO) by referring certain provider and member fraud incidents to MCO contractors for investigation. If such a process is implemented, it is anticipated that referral of investigations to MCO contractors may significantly impact the level of necessary OIG funding and staffing. Such a process may require managed care contract amendments and may also require approval from CMS. As AHCCCS implements the new referral processes, the agency will monitor workload and costs to evaluate whether funding and staffing levels are sufficient and will work with the Legislature to revise appropriations if needed. AHCCCS implemented a triage process to preliminarily investigate all provider fraud or abuse cases. Cases are preliminarily investigated when they are screened within 90 days of receipt, assigned a priority level, and referred to the Attorney General’s office, or other law enforcement agency, if the cases are identified for criminal investigation. To screen a case and assign a priority level of a referral of a potential fraud or abuse incident, an OIG supervisor assigns the matter a priority level. Priority One is “MEDIA, DEATH, NEGLECT, IMMEDIATE JEOPARDY/CONCERN, GOVERNOR OR DIRECTOR REFERRAL, CATS (CONSTITUENT AFFAIRS), ASSAULT, PRIORITY LAW ENFORCEMENT, EVIDENCE PRESERVATION”. Priority Two is “ALL OTHER LAW ENFORCEMENT CASES”. Priority Three is “ALL OTHER CASES”. The supervisor enters the priority level for the matter into the OIG SMART database and assigns the matter to an investigator. The SMART database has been programmed to incorporate the prioritization process and OIG staff were trained and the SMART database process was implemented by the end of March 2023. Upon assignment, investigators review a case for possible referral to the Attorney General’s office, or other law enforcement agency, within 24 hours and thereafter if further investigation warrants. Additionally, to ensure that priority level one cases are preliminarily investigated and referred within 90 days to the Attorney General’s office, or other law enforcement agency, (if applicable), each investigator tracks the progress of the investigation using a spreadsheet which is reviewed with their supervisor on a rotating periodic basis. All 2023 Provider cases have been implemented with these procedures. The triage and assignment process to preliminarily investigate member fraud or abuse cases was already in existence. Member personnel have a handbook outlining process, procedure, and workflow for their various priorities and allegations. Priority One is “Residency, member death, Joint, Information Only, ALTCS, Voluntary Withdrawal, or Identity Card Issues”. Priority Two is “TPL or Fast Track”. Priority Three is “High Dollar”. Priority Four is “Low Dollar or Short Benefit Time”. Priority Five is “Child Custody or Other Cases”. Only specific Member Case Priorities and Allegations have preliminary investigation timelines. Priority One cases with an allegation of Residency, ID Card Issues or Member Death are expected to have preliminary investigations completed within 10 days of assignment to an investigator. Priority Two cases with TPL allegations are expected to have preliminary investigations completed within 60 days of assignment to an investigator. Priority Two cases with Fast Track allegations are expected to have preliminary investigations completed within 30 days of assignment to an investigator. All other Priorities and allegation cases have completed investigative timeframes that vary from 120 days to 2 years as defined in the Member Handbook. AHCCCS has updated its Member handbook to provide clear process expectations, including the standard rotating review of each investigator’s case load with their supervisor to ensure preliminary investigations deadlines are completed, updated entries to the case management system occur, and subsequent allegations are accounted for in the case documentation.
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.778 Medical Assistance Program (Medicaid Title XIX) Agency: Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) Name of contact person and title: Jeff Tegen, Assistant Director, AHCCCS Division of Budget and Finance Anticipated completion date: Decembe...
Assistance listing number and program name: 93.778 Medical Assistance Program (Medicaid Title XIX) Agency: Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) Name of contact person and title: Jeff Tegen, Assistant Director, AHCCCS Division of Budget and Finance Anticipated completion date: December 31, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur In response to this item, AHCCCS has made holistic, system-wide improvements to the Medicaid payment system, including: 1. Required behavioral health providers to submit additional assessment, treatment plan, and medical records documentation with their claims, 2. Required Fee-For-Service providers billing more than 2 units of hourly codes or 4 units of 15-minutes codes on a single date of service, to provide additional documentation, 3. Added new reporting to flag concerning claims for review before payment, including, but not limited to, claims for services that could not be rendered as billed, claims for substance use treatment for minors age 12 and under, claims for services by different providers that should not be provided on the same day, and overlapping services of the same style, 4. Set billing thresholds and imposed prepayment review for various scenarios including multiple providers billing the same client on the same day for similar services, excessive number of hours per day, and the age of patients, 5. All codes intended for per diem services have been limited in the system and providers must bill each day separately rather than in date ranges, so per diem codes cannot be billed more than once a day on any given date of service, 6. Researched and confirmed that the National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) Medicaid coding methodologies, which allow for states to reduce improper payments, are in place and functioning correctly, 7. Set a specific rate for billing code H0015 for drug and alcohol treatment services, a change from the previous rate that paid a percentage of the billed amount, 8. Hired a forensic auditor to review all claims since 2019, 9. Implemented emergency rules to enhance and expand AHCCCS authority to exclude providers affiliated with bad actors, 10. Elevated three behavioral health provider types to the high-risk category for all new registrants, requiring fingerprints, on-site visits, background checks, and additional disclosures, 11. Implemented federal authority to impose a moratorium on new provider registrations for all Behavioral Health Outpatient Clinics, Integrated Clinics, Non-Emergency Transportation providers, Behavioral Health Residential Facilities, and Community Service Agencies, 12. Ended approval of retroactive provider registrations without good cause documentation, 13. Eliminated the ability for providers to bill on behalf of others, 14. Eliminated the ability for a member to switch enrollment from a managed care health plan to the American Indian Health Program (AIHP) over the phone, 15. Added a data request process for law enforcement agencies to assist with missing persons cases, and 16. Revised the Provider Participation Agreement (PPA) to explicitly require that if a provider stops providing services to AHCCCS members during an ongoing investigation, they must help the member transition to a new provider for care. Similarly, they are required to provide to AHCCCS a member census and, upon request, any other information needed to assist in care coordination. If they do not comply, AHCCCS has the right to file an injunction to require the provider to comply with the PPA. AHCCCS plans to implement additional measures to further strengthen the agency’s ability to detect and prevent potentially fraudulent activity. A partial list includes: • Requiring visual attestation of individual billers, • Requiring third-party billers to disclose terms of compensation, and • Determine methodology for AIHP enrollment criteria.
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.425 COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund-Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund (HEERF) Institutional Portion Agency: Northern Arizona University (NAA) Name of contact person and title: Bradley Miner, Interim Vice President and Comptroller Anticipated ...
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.425 COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund-Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund (HEERF) Institutional Portion Agency: Northern Arizona University (NAA) Name of contact person and title: Bradley Miner, Interim Vice President and Comptroller Anticipated completion date: August 18, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur See University response section at the end of this report for the corrective action response for finding 2022-125.
View Audit 7884 Questioned Costs: $1
Finding 5930 (2022-126)
Significant Deficiency 2022
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.425E COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund—Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund (HEERF)—Student Portion Student Financial Assistance Cluster 84.007 Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants 84.033 Federal Work-Study 84.038 Federal Perkins L...
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.425E COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund—Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund (HEERF)—Student Portion Student Financial Assistance Cluster 84.007 Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants 84.033 Federal Work-Study 84.038 Federal Perkins Loan Program—Federal Capital Contributions 84.063 Federal Pell Grant Programs 84.268 Federal Direct Student Loans 84.379 Teacher Education Assistance for College and Higher Education Grants (TEACH Grants) 93.364 Nursing Student Loans 93.925 Scholarships for Health Professions Students from Disadvantaged Backgrounds—Scholarships for Disadvantaged Students (SDS) Agency: Northern Arizona University (NAA) Name of contact person and title: Bradley Miner, Interim Associate Vice President and Comptroller Anticipated completion date: November 30, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur See University response section at the end of this report for the corrective action response for finding 2022-126.
View Audit 7884 Questioned Costs: $1
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.425C COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund – Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) Fund Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of S...
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.425C COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund – Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) Fund Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Completion date: July 31, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur All recommendations have been implemented. During fiscal year 2023, the Office took significant corrective action and completed Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA) reporting on a monthly basis, as required. Additionally, the Office has worked closely with its U.S. Department of Education program officer to correct inaccurate information previously reported in the FFATA reporting system. Finally, although the Office did not report awards in the FFATA reporting system in a timely manner during fiscal year 2022, it did comply with all U.S. Department of Education GEER annual reporting requirements. The information reported, including awardees, award amounts, and spending to date, is available to the public through the U.S. Department of Education’s federal pandemic relief funding transparency portal (https://covid-relief-data.ed.gov/). The Office has also conducted a staffing assessment and is adding resources to perform reporting activities.
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.425C COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund – Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) Fund Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of ...
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.425C COVID-19 Education Stabilization Fund – Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) Fund Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Completion date: July 31, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur During fiscal year 2023, the Office took significant corrective action to improve subrecipient monitoring, including assessing each subrecipient’s risk of noncompliance, collecting single audits (as applicable) or certified financial statements from new awardees, and requesting and reviewing additional information from grantees related to uses of awarded funds. Moving forward, the Office proposes the following: 1. The Office will annually require grantees to complete a questionnaire to attest whether the entity will be required to obtain a single audit. The Office will collect single audits (as applicable) or certified financial statements in order to review and follow-up on corrective action items related to the grants administered. The Office will conduct grantee training regarding subrecipient monitoring and the requirements for grantees accepting Federal grant awards. 2. The Office staff have attended various training opportunities to improve their understanding of and tools available to them to perform subrecipient monitoring procedures, as required. The Office has also conducted a staffing assessment and has added staff to perform subrecipient monitoring activities.
Assistance listing number and program name: N/A Agency: Department of Education Name of contact person and title: Mark Belanger, Budget Director Anticipated completion date: October 31, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department agrees with this finding and will implement the following: • Trai...
Assistance listing number and program name: N/A Agency: Department of Education Name of contact person and title: Mark Belanger, Budget Director Anticipated completion date: October 31, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department agrees with this finding and will implement the following: • Train designated staff responsible for preparing the Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards (SEFA) on State of Arizona Accounting Manual (SAAM) requirements. • Establish a reconciliation process to validate expenditures prior to submitting report • Staff will review federal resources for Assistance Listing Numbers (formerly CFDAs) to ensure proper title reporting • Designated staff will stay current on all federal regulations and SAAM requirements for reporting
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.010 Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies 84.425D Education Stabilization Fund – Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund 84.425U Education Stabilization Funds – American Rescue Plan Act – ESSER FUND (ARP ESSER) Agency: Depar...
Assistance listing number and program name: 84.010 Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies 84.425D Education Stabilization Fund – Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund 84.425U Education Stabilization Funds – American Rescue Plan Act – ESSER FUND (ARP ESSER) Agency: Department of Education Name of contact person and title: Deidre Mai, Deputy Associate Superintendent of Grants Management Krystal Chacon, Compliance Coordinator of Grants Management Anticipated completion date: January 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department agrees with findings and will implement the following: • Immediately report on the Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act (FFATA) Subaward Reporting System the required information for subawards for all federal programs, including the following: o 84.010 Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies o 84.425D Education Stabilization Fund—Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund o 84.425U Education Stabilization Funds – American Rescue Plan Act—ESSER Fund (ARP ESSER). • Develop procedures that follow the State’s accounting manual for reporting subaward actions exceeding $30,000 no later than month-end of the month following the subaward action, as required by the FFATA and federal Uniform Guidance, and implement procedures requiring independent reviews to: o Ensure the subaward data is complete and accurate prior to uploading it to the federal government’s reporting system by crosschecking the agency’s Grants Management Enterprise (GME) System FFATA report against the GME Grant Summary report. o Verify that the subaward data uploaded to the federal government’s reporting system was complete and correctly displayed by crosschecking USASpending.gov data against the GME FFATA and Grant Summary reports. • Identify validation inaccuracies in FFATA data report from state’s GME system. o Develop a new FFATA report with system vendor. o Review and confirm the FFATA data parameters are correct. • Assign new staff to FFATA reporting and train all staff on new procedures. • Add FFATA reporting to Grants Management continuous improvement process goals. • Produce a monthly status report to be shared and reviewed by the Deputy Associate Superintendent of Grants Management.
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.027 COVID-19 State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds Name of contact person and title: Kori Kappes, Finance Administrator Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department will ensure subaward entities provide all record...
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.027 COVID-19 State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds Name of contact person and title: Kori Kappes, Finance Administrator Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department will ensure subaward entities provide all records to the division relating to federal awards. The Department will also ensure it retains all records for a period of 3 years from the final expenditure report submission date. The Department will continue to resolve the $10,000 of questionable costs as deemed appropriate by the State of Arizona Office of the Governor and the United States Department of Treasury.
View Audit 7884 Questioned Costs: $1
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.027 Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Completio...
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.027 Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Completion date: October 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur The Office recognizes the importance of transparency in the utilization of Federal grants and has taken significant corrective action to resolve any inaccuracies in Federal grant reporting. The Office has implemented the following to ensure reporting inaccuracies and program expenditure understatements do not occur: 1. The Office has conducted a comprehensive review and has thoroughly examined the current reporting procedures and identified the gaps that led to the reporting inaccuracies and understatement of program expenditures. This has helped us understand the root causes and implement appropriate corrective measures. 2. The Office has enhanced reporting mechanisms: Based on the comprehensive review noted in response one, the Office is working to develop improved reporting procedures to ensure accurate submission of grant expenditure data. This may include revised standardized templates, improved guidelines, and enhanced communication channels both for Office staff and externally with grant recipients. 3. The Office will strengthen internal controls: The Office has implemented a monthly reconciliation process to review grantee expenditures and fiscal activity to ensure accurate reporting. The Office will continue to improve internal controls to prevent similar issues from occurring in the future. This will involve strengthening oversight, providing additional training to staff members involved in reporting processes, and implementing regular quality assurance checks, along with improved grant recipient monitoring.
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.027 Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Arizona Office of Tourism Arizona Supreme Court Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s O...
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.027 Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Arizona Office of Tourism Arizona Supreme Court Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Lena Allen, Director of Outdoor Recreation & Sustainability Alyce Agostino, Financial Analyst, Grant Compliance Agency’s Response: Concur Anticipated Completion date: see below Office Completion date: July 31, 2024 During fiscal year 2023, the Office took significant corrective action to improve subrecipient monitoring, including assessing each subrecipient’s risk of noncompliance, collecting single audits (as applicable) or certified financial statements from new awardees, and requesting and reviewing additional information from grantees related to uses of awarded funds: 1. The Office will annually require grantees to complete a questionnaire to attest whether the entity will be required to obtain a single audit. The Office will collect single audits (as applicable) or certified financial statements in order to review and follow-up on corrective action items related to the grants administered. The Office will conduct grantee training regarding subrecipient monitoring and the requirements for grantees accepting Federal grant awards. 2. The Office staff have attended various training opportunities to improve their understanding of and tools available to them to perform subrecipient monitoring procedures, as required. The Office has also conducted a staffing assessment and has added staff to perform subrecipient monitoring activities. Arizona Office of Tourism Anticipated Completion date: January 31, 2024 • Risk Assessment aspect of finding: The Arizona Office of Tourism (AOT) is now aware and will comply with these requirements. In order to comply, AOT will update processes and procedures to include risk assessments of subrecipients. This process will include both an outline for analysis along with the proper documentation and all necessary actions. • Subrecipient Single Audit aspect of finding: Per 2 CFR 200.332(f) AOT had a process in place for any subrecipient that was awarded through the Visit Arizona Initiative Grant Program over $750,000. As outlined by the audit, 2 CFR 200.332(f) applies for any organization that receives over $750,000 in federal funds even outside of the VAI grant program. To align with this requirement, AOT will create a process for identifying, requesting and reviewing Single Audits. Arizona Supreme Court – Administration Office of the Courts Anticipated Completion date: February 28, 2024 The Judicial Branch, Arizona Supreme Court, has drafted a Risk-Assessment Questionnaire for all Grants in which the Supreme Court is a pass-through grantee, to collect all essential information that is needed to reasonably assess the risk probability of possible subrecipients going forward in accordance with 2 CFR §200.332[b] and [d-e].
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.023 COVID-19 Emergency Rental Assistance Program Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Molly Bright, DCAD Assistant Director Anticipated completion date: December 31, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department of...
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.023 COVID-19 Emergency Rental Assistance Program Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Molly Bright, DCAD Assistant Director Anticipated completion date: December 31, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department of Economic Security will address the audit recommendations as follows: 1. Develop and implement written policies and procedures to ensure the system used to process ERA claims and report program information produces summarized data on its federal reporting dashboard that are complete and accurate and comply with the federal agency’s reporting guidelines. The Department will develop written policies and procedures to ensure the information produced by the system used for processing ERA claims and program information is accurate and complete when providing this data to the federal reporting dashboard. These policies and procedures will bring the Department into compliance with the federal agency’s reporting guidelines. Department staff will be trained in accordance with the policies and procedures. 2. Follow its policies and procedures to retain all records relating to a federal award for a period of 3 years from the date of its submission of the final expenditure report. The Department will improve its compliance with its Record Retention policies and procedures, and will retain for 3 years all records that are required as outlined within the provisions of the federal awards received by the Department. 3. Verify the ERA-reported program information and the federal reporting dashboard to the underlying system data during each report’s review and approval process. The Department will, during each report’s review and approval process, sample the information from the underlying system prior to submitting it to the federal agency to verify its accuracy. This process will be included within the Department’s written policies and procedures created for ERA federal reporting. 4. Prepare and retain detailed documentation and submitted reports, such as system reports, queries, or screenshots, to support the program information it reports to the federal agency for each ERA award. The Department will assemble and retain all detailed documentation and submitted reports, such as but not limited to the aforementioned items, to provide support for the program information that the Department reports to the federal agency for each ERA award it receives. These documents and reports will be maintained in accordance with the Department’s Record Retention policies and procedures and federal requirements.
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.019 COVID-19 Coronavirus Relief Fund Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Anticipated completion date...
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.019 COVID-19 Coronavirus Relief Fund Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting (Office) Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Anticipated completion date: January 31, 2023 Agency’s response: Concur Completed. As of January 12, 2023, the State of Arizona’s final closeout report to the U.S. Department of the Treasury on uses of Coronavirus Relief Funds (CRF) was submitted and accepted. As part of this final closeout report’s preparation, the Office completed a reconciliation of all activity reported against the information in the State’s accounting system and obtained clarification from State agencies awarded funds, as necessary, to help ensure the final report was complete and accurate.
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.019 COVID-19 Coronavirus Relief Fund Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Anticipated completion date: July 3...
Assistance listing number and program name: 21.019 COVID-19 Coronavirus Relief Fund Agency: Arizona Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning and Budgeting Name of contact person and title: Sarah Brown, Director Governor’s Office of Strategic Planning & Budgeting Anticipated completion date: July 31, 2024 Agency’s response: Concur During fiscal year 2023, the Office took significant corrective action to improve subrecipient monitoring, including assessing each subrecipient’s risk of noncompliance, collecting single audits (as applicable) or certified financial statements from new awardees, and requesting and reviewing additional information from grantees related to uses of awarded funds. Additionally, Office staff have attended trainings to improve their understanding of and tools available to them to perform subrecipient monitoring procedures, as required. The Office has also conducted a staffing assessment and is adding resources to perform subrecipient monitoring.
Assistance listing number and program name: 17.225 COVID-19 Unemployment Insurance Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Jean Ahumada, BAM Manager Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department of Economic Security will addr...
Assistance listing number and program name: 17.225 COVID-19 Unemployment Insurance Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Jean Ahumada, BAM Manager Anticipated completion date: June 30, 2024 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department of Economic Security will address the audit recommendations as follows: The Department continues to work to recruit individuals with a strong knowledge and understanding of Unemployment Insurance (UI) laws, policy, procedures, and proper case management as new vacancies occur through attrition. The Department’s goal is to recruit and fill remaining staff vacancies prior to June 2024. The Department also continues to make efforts to improve staff retention. Note, the Department met the required minimum percentage of denied claims accuracy for 60-days and 90-days timeliness for both Separation and Nonseparation since batch ending August 31, 2022.
Assistance listing number and program name: 17.225 COVID-19 Unemployment Insurance Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Sandra Canez, Unemployment Insurance Program Administrator Jacqueline Butera, Quality Assurance and Integrity Administrator Anticipated comple...
Assistance listing number and program name: 17.225 COVID-19 Unemployment Insurance Agency: Department of Economic Security Name of contact person and title: Sandra Canez, Unemployment Insurance Program Administrator Jacqueline Butera, Quality Assurance and Integrity Administrator Anticipated completion date: July 16, 2023 Agency’s Response: Concur The Department of Economic Security took the following actions to remediate finding 2022-110 and prior year finding 2021-108. In July 2023, the Department completed the wage evaluation of the claimants determined eligible to receive above the $117-minimum weekly UI benefit amount, as noted in the finding. Any resulting overpayment for the federal CARES Act programs was established by the Department, and where appropriate, waivers were considered and allowed following federal regulations and the state overpayment policy. As noted in the finding, the Department addressed the 7 sampled cases and will continue to follow well-established overpayment and recovery policy and procedures.
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