Finding 1187296 (2024-002)

Material Weakness Repeat Finding
Requirement
N
Questioned Costs
-
Year
2024
Accepted
2026-03-26

AI Summary

  • Core Issue: City of Laredo was not monitored as a subrecipient for FY2024 across three programs, leading to a material weakness in internal controls.
  • Impacted Requirements: Compliance with 2 CFR §200.332 was not met, as there was no annual monitoring schedule for subrecipients.
  • Recommended Follow-Up: Establish a formal Annual Subrecipient Monitoring Schedule and a Monitoring Tracking Log, with regular reviews and progress reports to ensure compliance.

Finding Text

Finding 2024-002 | Subrecipient Not Monitored — City of Laredo Across Three Programs Material Weakness in Internal Control over Compliance | First-Time Finding Programs Affected: Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program (ALN 93.917) | HOPWA (ALN 14.241) | State Services (HHS001317000004) Compliance Requirement: N — Special Tests / Subrecipient Monitoring (2 CFR 200.332) Questioned Costs: $0 Known / $0 Likely — no noncompliance identified at City of Laredo Repeat Finding: No — First-Time Finding Condition: City of Laredo was not monitored in FY2024 under any of the three programs for which it served as a subrecipient: Ryan White — $377,343 (11.7% of program total); State Services — $654,132 (24.5% of program total); HOPWA — $130,943 (7.5% of program total). Combined unmonitored expenditures: $1,162,418. Criteria: 2 CFR §200.332 requires pass-through entities to monitor the activities of subrecipients to ensure that federal awards are used for authorized purposes in compliance with applicable laws, regulations, and the terms of the subaward. STDC's Subrecipient Monitoring Policy, adopted as part of the corrective action for Finding 2022-006, requires annual monitoring of all subrecipients under each program. Cause: No formal, documented annual subrecipient monitoring schedule was maintained during FY2024. The absence of a structured tracking mechanism allowed the City of Laredo to go unmonitored across all three programs for the full fiscal year. STDC notes that five of six Ryan White and State Services subrecipients and three of four HOPWA subrecipients were monitored during FY2024; the lapse was isolated to the City of Laredo. Effect: STDC did not fulfill its pass-through entity obligations under 2 CFR §200.332 for the City of Laredo across three programs with combined subrecipient expenditures of $1,162,418. No noncompliance was identified at the City of Laredo based on available documentation. Recommendation: STDC should develop and maintain a formal Annual Subrecipient Monitoring Schedule at the start of each grant year, covering all active programs and all subrecipients. The schedule should identify the monitoring method, assigned staff, planned dates, and actual completion dates, and should be reviewed and approved by the Executive Director. A Monitoring Tracking Log should be maintained and reviewed weekly, with quarterly progress reports to the Executive Director.

Corrective Action Plan

Finding 2024-002 | Subrecipient Not Monitored — City of Laredo Across Three Programs Material Weakness in Internal Control over Compliance | Ryan White (93.917) | HOPWA (14.241) | State Services (HHS001317000004) | First-Time Finding Finding Number: 2024-002 Planned Completion Date: June 30, 2025 (retroactive review and system implementation); ongoing thereafter Responsible Official(s): Josafat Saldivar, Finance Director (monitoring schedule and fiscal monitoring); Program Managers — Ryan White, State Services, HOPWA (programmatic coordination); Juan E. Rodriguez, Executive Director (oversight and quarterly review) Agency Response: STDC acknowledges the finding and recognizes the seriousness of the Material Weakness classification. During FY2024, STDC did not conduct the required annual monitoring of the City of Laredo under the Ryan White, State Services, or HOPWA programs. Combined subrecipient expenditures for the City of Laredo across these three programs totaled $1,162,418. STDC concurs that this constitutes a failure to meet the subrecipient monitoring requirements of 2 CFR 200.332 and the applicable contract terms for all three programs. Management acknowledges that the absence of a formal, documented annual monitoring schedule allowed this gap to go undetected. STDC notes that five of six Ryan White and State Services subrecipients and three of four HOPWA subrecipients were monitored during FY2024; the lapse was isolated to the City of Laredo across all three programs. STDC takes seriously its obligation to ensure all subrecipients are monitored on schedule and is committed to implementing a comprehensive corrective action that addresses both the immediate gap and the underlying control deficiency. STDC also notes that subrecipient monitoring policies and procedures were formally developed and adopted as part of the corrective action for Finding 2022-006. The recurrence of a monitoring gap in FY2024 underscores the need for a more structured scheduling and tracking mechanism to ensure those procedures are consistently applied across all programs and subrecipients each grant year. Corrective Actions to Be Implemented: Action 1 (Target: April 30, 2025): Retroactive Monitoring Review — Conduct a desk review of the City of Laredo's FY2024 subrecipient expenditures, financial reports, and compliance documentation under Ryan White (ALN 93.917), State Services (HHS001317000004), and HOPWA (ALN 14.241), using the standardized monitoring tools and checklists established under STDC's existing Subrecipient Monitoring Policy. Document results and retain findings in the City of Laredo subrecipient monitoring files. Action 2 (Target: April 30, 2025): Develop a formal, written Annual Subrecipient Monitoring Schedule at the start of each grant year, covering all active programs and all subrecipients. The schedule will identify: subrecipient name, program(s), subaward amount, assigned monitoring staff, planned monitoring method (desk review or on-site), and planned and actual completion dates. The schedule must be reviewed and approved by the Executive Director. Action 3 (Target: May 15, 2025): Implement a Monitoring Tracking Log consistent with STDC's existing Subrecipient Monitoring Policy to be updated on an ongoing basis and reviewed weekly. The log will track monitoring visit dates, report draft and distribution dates, and status of any corrective actions required of subrecipients. Action 4 (Target: May 31, 2025): Implement a quarterly monitoring progress report to the Executive Director identifying: (a) subrecipients scheduled for monitoring, (b) monitoring completed to date, (c) any past-due monitoring, and (d) findings or corrective actions arising from completed monitoring activities. Action 5 (Target: Ongoing, beginning FY2025): At the start of each grant year, cross-reference the Annual Subrecipient Monitoring Schedule against all active subaward agreements and update the schedule whenever a new subaward is executed or a new subrecipient is added to any program, to ensure no subrecipient is omitted from the monitoring plan. Action 6 (Target: June 30, 2025): Conduct refresher training for all finance and program staff responsible for subrecipient monitoring on the requirements of 2 CFR 200.332, STDC's Subrecipient Monitoring Policy, and the use of the updated annual monitoring schedule and tracking log. Monitoring and Evaluation: Quarterly monitoring progress reports will be submitted to the Executive Director to verify that all subrecipients are monitored according to the annual schedule. The Annual Subrecipient Monitoring Schedule and Monitoring Tracking Log will be maintained in the subrecipient compliance files and available for audit review. Compliance with the Subrecipient Monitoring Policy will be reviewed annually, and any deviations will be addressed through staff corrective action plans as appropriate.

Categories

Subrecipient Monitoring

Other Findings in this Audit

  • 1187291 2024-001
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187292 2024-001
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187293 2024-002
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187294 2024-002
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187295 2024-002
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187297 2024-003
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187298 2024-003
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187299 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187300 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187301 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187302 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187303 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187304 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187305 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187306 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187307 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187308 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187309 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187310 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187311 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187312 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187313 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187314 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187315 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187316 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187317 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187318 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187319 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187320 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187321 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187322 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187323 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187324 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187325 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 1187326 2024-004
    Material Weakness Repeat

Programs in Audit

ALN Program Name Expenditures
93.917 HIV CARE FORMULA GRANTS $1.51M
14.241 HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES FOR PERSONS WITH AIDS $176,323
93.045 SPECIAL PROGRAMS FOR THE AGING, TITLE III, PART C, NUTRITION SERVICES $115,429
93.569 COMMUNITY SERVICES BLOCK GRANT $106,251
93.052 NATIONAL FAMILY CAREGIVER SUPPORT, TITLE III, PART E $85,778
93.044 SPECIAL PROGRAMS FOR THE AGING, TITLE III, PART B, GRANTS FOR SUPPORTIVE SERVICES AND SENIOR CENTERS $61,296
97.067 HOMELAND SECURITY GRANT PROGRAM $40,000
93.499 LOW INCOME HOUSEHOLD WATER ASSISTANCE PROGRAM $23,482
11.302 ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT FOR PLANNING ORGANIZATIONS $22,014
93.043 SPECIAL PROGRAMS FOR THE AGING, TITLE III, PART D, DISEASE PREVENTION AND HEALTH PROMOTION SERVICES $16,074
93.324 STATE HEALTH INSURANCE ASSISTANCE PROGRAM $7,865
93.071 MEDICARE ENROLLMENT ASSISTANCE PROGRAM $5,779
93.568 LOW-INCOME HOME ENERGY ASSISTANCE $4,422
93.042 SPECIAL PROGRAMS FOR THE AGING, TITLE VII, CHAPTER 2, LONG TERM CARE OMBUDSMAN SERVICES FOR OLDER INDIVIDUALS $4,318
93.791 MONEY FOLLOWS THE PERSON REBALANCING DEMONSTRATION $3,898
14.228 COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/STATE'S PROGRAM AND NON-ENTITLEMENT GRANTS IN HAWAII $3,305
93.041 SPECIAL PROGRAMS FOR THE AGING, TITLE VII, CHAPTER 3, PROGRAMS FOR PREVENTION OF ELDER ABUSE, NEGLECT, AND EXPLOITATION $22
93.053 NUTRITION SERVICES INCENTIVE PROGRAM $14