Finding 1136807 (2024-002)

Significant Deficiency
Requirement
ABFGLMN
Questioned Costs
-
Year
2024
Accepted
2025-05-14
Audit: 356273
Organization: Fort Cherry School District (PA)
Auditor: Jmallc

AI Summary

  • Core Issue: The School District's small staff limits proper segregation of duties, increasing the risk of errors or fraud.
  • Impacted Requirements: Key accounting functions are handled by the same individuals, violating the principle that no one person should control all aspects of a transaction.
  • Recommended Follow-Up: Consider hiring additional staff to improve internal controls, or implement alternative oversight measures to mitigate risks.

Finding Text

2024-2 Segregation of Duties Criteria: The small size of the School District’s business office staff limits the extent of separation of duties. The basic premise in an ideal accounting office is that no one employee should have access to both physical assets and the related accounting records or to all phases of a transaction. Some examples of lack of segregation of duties at the School District are as follows: The individual who receives checks on a routine basis also prepares the deposit. The same individual also reviews the receivables aging trial balance, investigates receivable discrepancies, and maintains or authorizes receivables adjustments as well as investigates discrepancies or issues related to revenue. For the cafeteria, one person receives the cash receipts, enters the deposit into the accounting system, and makes the deposit at the financial institution. One employee initiates checks for expenditures, edits the vendor master file, and investigates discrepancies or issues related to expenditures. Condition: The School District has a limited number of staff responsible for or access to various stages of the accounting processes. Cause: The District does not have the number of employees necessary in the business office to properly segregate all duties. Recommendation: Ideally, the District would hire the number of staff necessary to segregate all duties. However, we realize segregation of duties is not practical, if not impossible. Because of this internal control situation, the responsibility of the Business Manager is greatly increased because the Board must rely on her knowledge of the everyday operations to discover any material changes in the School District’s financial position. Effect: A lack in separation of duties makes the School District more susceptible to misappropriation of District Assets. Views of Responsible Official and Planned Corrective Action: See corrective action plan included in this report package.

Categories

Internal Control / Segregation of Duties HUD Housing Programs

Other Findings in this Audit

  • 560363 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 560364 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 560365 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 560366 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 560367 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 560368 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 1136805 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 1136806 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 1136808 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 1136809 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency
  • 1136810 2024-002
    Significant Deficiency

Programs in Audit

ALN Program Name Expenditures
84.027 Special Education Grants to States $209,913
84.010 Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies $162,836
10.553 School Breakfast Program $108,347
10.555 National School Lunch Program $49,616
84.367 Supporting Effective Instruction State Grants (formerly Improving Teacher Quality State Grants) $25,076
84.424 Student Support and Academic Enrichment Program $12,853
84.425 Education Stabilization Fund $12,140
84.173 Special Education Preschool Grants $1,525
10.649 Pandemic Ebt Administrative Costs $653