Finding 1162342 (2024-003)

Material Weakness Repeat Finding
Requirement
L
Questioned Costs
-
Year
2024
Accepted
2025-11-14
Audit: 372149
Organization: School Board City of Richmond (VA)

AI Summary

  • Core Issue: The grant administrator failed to provide required quarterly and annual reports for COVID-19 funding, leading to a lack of accountability for fund usage.
  • Impacted Requirements: Documentation for project and expenditure reports was not maintained, violating reporting criteria set by the Virginia Department of Education.
  • Recommended Follow-Up: The grant administrator should ensure proper documentation practices are in place to meet reporting requirements and demonstrate fund accountability.

Finding Text

2024-003 – Significant Deficiency and Nonmaterial Noncompliance – Reporting Program: COVID-19 – Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (ARPA) (ALN 21.027) – United States Department of Education – Virginia Department of Education; Federal Award Year: 2024. Prior Year Audit Finding Number: 2023-003 Criteria: Project and Expenditure reports should be submitted to the VDOE quarterly and annually. Condition: The grant administrator was unable to provide quarterly and annual reporting requirements for fiscal year 2024. Cause: Documentation was not maintained for audit purposes. Effect: Accountability for use of the funds can not be demonstrated. Questioned Costs: None Recommendation: Grant administrator should maintain adequate documentation. Views of Responsible Officials and Planned Corrective Action: According to Appendix: American Rescue Plan CSLFRF HVAC Replacement and Improvement Grant Assurances of the 2021 CSLFRF HVAC Application it is stated the LEA/grantee assures: IX. It will submit such reports to the state educational agency as the state educational agency and Secretary may require to enable the state educational agency and the Secretary to perform their duties under the program; The LEA has also submitted an official correspondence to the Auditors from the Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education’s Director of the Office of Federal Pandemic Relief Programs stating the following: On April 25, 2023, the Virginia Department of Education conducted monitoring to ensure that certain federally funded programs and activities supported with Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) formula grants; ESSER and Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) state setaside grants; and Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund (CSLFRF) HVAC grants were implemented as stipulated by law. These federally funded programs were reviewed as operated by Richmond City Public Schools. Furthermore, RPS is a subrecipient. As such it is our stance that RPS was not required to create or submit quarterly financial activity reports to US Treasury. We were also not required to submit quarterly financial reports to the recipient (i.e. the Commonwealth of Virginia). Instead, RPS regularly submitted expenditures for reimbursement to VDOE on a nearly monthly basis via OMEGA. We also maintained financial records (invoices, GL transactions) via AS400 and LINQ and conducted annual single audits as required by the Single Audit Act & 2 CFR part 200, subpart F. We also complied with all monitoring activities conducted by VDOE. In turn, VDOE (the award recipient) used these artifacts to create and submit its quarterly financial reports to US Treasury, as required by statute. For more evidence of this "passthrough" structure of reporting, see the attached SLFRF Compliance and Reporting Guidance published by US Treasury and Updated October 2025 Part 2 Section B (p. 21-22) for a detail of which entities are required to submit quarterly reports. The following recipients are required to submit quarterly Project and Expenditure Reports: • States and U.S. territories • Tribal governments that are allocated more than $30 million in SLFRF funding • Metropolitan cities and counties with a population that exceeds 250,000 residents Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds C • Metropolitan cities and counties with a population below 250,000 residents that are allocated more than $10 million in SLFRF funding • NEUs [Non-Entitlement Units of Government] that are allocated more than $10 million in SLFRF funding RPS does not fall into any of the aforementioned categories. We humble ask that you reconsider this finding.

Corrective Action Plan

Views of Responsible Officials and Planned Corrective Action: According to Appendix: American Rescue Plan CSLFRF HVAC Replacement and Improvement Grant Assurances of the 2021 CSLFRF HVAC Application it is stated the LEA/grantee assures: IX. It will submit such reports to the state educational agency as the state educational agency and Secretary may require to enable the state educational agency and the Secretary to perform their duties under the program; The LEA has also submitted an official correspondence to the Auditors from the Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Education’s Director of the Office of Federal Pandemic Relief Programs stating the following: On April 25, 2023, the Virginia Department of Education conducted monitoring to ensure that certain federally funded programs and activities supported with Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) formula grants; ESSER and Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) state setaside grants; and Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund (CSLFRF) HVAC grants were implemented as stipulated by law. These federally funded programs were reviewed as operated by Richmond City Public Schools. Furthermore, RPS is a subrecipient. As such it is our stance that RPS was not required to create or submit quarterly financial activity reports to US Treasury. We were also not required to submit quarterly financial reports to the recipient (i.e. the Commonwealth of Virginia). Instead, RPS regularly submitted expenditures for reimbursement to VDOE on a nearly monthly basis via OMEGA. We also maintained financial records (invoices, GL transactions) via AS400 and LINQ and conducted annual single audits as required by the Single Audit Act & 2 CFR part 200, subpart F. We also complied with all monitoring activities conducted by VDOE. In turn, VDOE (the award recipient) used these artifacts to create and submit its quarterly financial reports to US Treasury, as required by statute. For more evidence of this "passthrough" structure of reporting, see the attached SLFRF Compliance and Reporting Guidance published by US Treasury and Updated October 2025 Part 2 Section B (p. 21-22) for a detail of which entities are required to submit quarterly reports. The following recipients are required to submit quarterly Project and Expenditure Reports: • States and U.S. territories • Tribal governments that are allocated more than $30 million in SLFRF funding • Metropolitan cities and counties with a population that exceeds 250,000 residents Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds C • Metropolitan cities and counties with a population below 250,000 residents that are allocated more than $10 million in SLFRF funding • NEUs [Non-Entitlement Units of Government] that are allocated more than $10 million in SLFRF funding RPS does not fall into any of the aforementioned categories. We humble ask that you reconsider this finding.

Categories

Subrecipient Monitoring Cash Management Reporting Significant Deficiency

Other Findings in this Audit

  • 1162343 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1162344 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1162345 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat

Programs in Audit

ALN Program Name Expenditures
84.010 TITLE I GRANTS TO LOCAL EDUCATIONAL AGENCIES $16.57M
10.555 NATIONAL SCHOOL LUNCH PROGRAM $10.62M
93.600 HEAD START $9.00M
10.553 SCHOOL BREAKFAST PROGRAM $4.72M
21.027 CORONAVIRUS STATE AND LOCAL FISCAL RECOVERY FUNDS $1.58M
84.367 SUPPORTING EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTION STATE GRANTS (FORMERLY IMPROVING TEACHER QUALITY STATE GRANTS) $1.16M
10.558 CHILD AND ADULT CARE FOOD PROGRAM $1.05M
84.424 STUDENT SUPPORT AND ACADEMIC ENRICHMENT PROGRAM $1.05M
84.002 ADULT EDUCATION - BASIC GRANTS TO STATES $962,992
84.287 TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY COMMUNITY LEARNING CENTERS $753,490
84.048 CAREER AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION -- BASIC GRANTS TO STATES $742,856
10.582 FRESH FRUIT AND VEGETABLE PROGRAM $574,093
12.000 ISSUE OF DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE EXCESS EQUIPMENT $515,339
84.365 ENGLISH LANGUAGE ACQUISITION STATE GRANTS $395,688
84.425 EDUCATION STABILIZATION FUND $232,928
10.649 PANDEMIC EBT ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS $106,915
93.354 PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY RESPONSE: COOPERATIVE AGREEMENT FOR EMERGENCY RESPONSE: PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS RESPONSE $98,057
84.041 IMPACT AID $94,774
84.013 TITLE I STATE AGENCY PROGRAM FOR NEGLECTED AND DELINQUENT CHILDREN AND YOUTH $57,912
84.196 EDUCATION FOR HOMELESS CHILDREN AND YOUTH $50,771
84.173 SPECIAL EDUCATION PRESCHOOL GRANTS $47,322
84.027 SPECIAL EDUCATION GRANTS TO STATES $20,358