Finding No.: 2023-016 Federal Agency: U.S. Department of the Interior AL Program: 15.875 Economic, Social, and Political Development of the Territories Federal Award No.: Compact of Free Association, As Amended Questioned Costs: $314,943 Area: Procurement and Suspension and Debarment Criteria: Section 200.317 of 2 CFR Part 200 Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards states that, when procuring property and services under a Federal award, a state must follow the same policies and procedures it uses for procurements from its non-Federal funds. RepMar’s Procurement Code states the following: (a) Section 124 - unless otherwise authorized by law, all Government contracts shall be awarded by competitive sealed bidding. (b) Section 127 - procurement of goods and services not exceeding $25,000 may be made in accordance with small purchase procedures promulgated by RepMar’s Policy Office. Small purchase procedures are those relatively simple and informal methods for securing services, supplies, or other property that do not cost more than $25,000. RepMar’s Ministry of Finance, Banking and Postal Services has previously declared that if small purchase procedures are used, price or rate quotations shall be obtained from three qualified sources. (c) Section 128 - a contract may be awarded for a supply, service, or construction item without competition when it is determined in writing that there is only one source for the required supply, service, or construction item. The RMI Procurement Regulations Pursuant to the Procurement Code Act 1988 (RMI Procurement Regulations) Sections 5 and 6 stipulate procedures pertaining to suspension or debarment of persons who shall not be considered for award of contracts. 2 CFR 200.214 states that recipients and subrecipients are subject to the non-procurement debarment and suspension regulations implementing Executive Orders 12549 and 12689, as well as 2 CFR part 180. The regulations in 2 CFR part 180 restrict making Federal awards, subawards, and contracts with certain parties that are debarred, suspended, or otherwise excluded from receiving or participating in Federal awards. 2 CFR 180.300 states that when an entity enters into a covered transaction with another person at the next lower tier, the entity must verify that the person with whom the entity intends to do business is not excluded or disqualified by doing the following: (a) Checking SAM.gov Exclusions; or (b) Collecting a certification from that person; or (c) Adding a clause or condition to the covered transaction with that person. Furthermore, 2 CFR 200.303(a) states that a recipient of a Federal award must establish, document, and maintain effective internal control over the Federal award that provides reasonable assurance that the recipient is managing the Federal award in compliance with Federal statutes, regulations, and the terms and conditions of the Federal award. These internal controls should align with the 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). Condition 1: For 8 (or 12%) of 65 procurement transactions tested, aggregating $6,463,583 of $16,926,745 in total transactions subject to procurement requirements, there was no procurement file provided to substantiate compliance with applicable procurement requirements as follows: Item # Fund # Voucher # Amount 1 10410 22/00001589 JOURNAL $ 11,581 2 10409 22/00001587 JOURNAL 167,852 3 10401 22/00003286 PINVOICE 21,178 4 10406 22/00003856 PINVOICE 9,950 5 10406 22/00005332 PINVOICE 10,275 6 10401 22/00000717 PINVOICE 23,247 7 10406 22/00005350 PINVOICE 24,995 8 10406 22/00001939 PINVOICE 10,437 $ 279,515 Condition 2: For 3 (or 5%) of 65 procurement transactions tested, aggregating $6,463,583 of $16,926,745 in total transactions, the procurement documentation is insufficient to support the rationale for vendor selection in accordance with 2 CFR section 200.323 and 48 CFR section 15.404-3. Item # Fund # Voucher # Amount 1 10402 22/00003565 PINVOICE $ 4,784 2 10402 22/00004883 PINVOICE 5,000 3 10406 22/00002441 PV 660 $ 10,444 For 9 (or 14%) of 65 procurement transactions tested, aggregating $6,463,583 of $16,926,745 in total transactions, supporting procurement documentation was not sufficient to substantiate compliance with applicable procurement requirements as follows: Item # Fund # Voucher # Amount 1 10402 22/00004885 PINVOICE $ 5,000 2 10402 22/00005513 PINVOICE 1,430 3 10406 22/00003035 PV 508 4 10406 22/00011377 PV 4,870 5 10406 22/00000549 PV 336 6 10403 22/00011927 PV 2,319 7 10401 22/00001875 PINVOICE 2,195 8 10402 22/00003839 PV 2,565 9 10402 22/00000269 PV 5,761 $ 24,984 No quotations/ cost comparison were provided for the items. The procurement documentation is insufficient to demonstrate compliance with applicable procurement requirements. Condition 4: Documented evidence of compliance with RMI Procurement Regulations and 2 CFR 200.214 and 2 CFR 180.300 regarding debarred, suspended, or otherwise excluded persons or entities was not made available. Cause: RepMar did not enforce internal control policies and procedures over documentation of the procurement process to satisfy compliance with applicable procurement requirements. Effect: RepMar is in noncompliance with applicable procurement requirements. The reportable questioned cost is $314,943. Identification as a Repeat Finding: Finding No. 2022-006 Recommendation: Responsible personnel should require that documentation be adequate to comply with applicable procurement requirements. Specifically, documentation should indicate the history of procurement, including the rationale for contractor or vendor selection. Views of Responsible Officials: RepMar’s Corrective Action Plan does not indicate disagreement and provides planned corrective action.