Finding 605277 (2022-103)

Material Weakness Repeat Finding
Requirement
G
Questioned Costs
$1
Year
2022
Accepted
2023-03-30
Audit: 28884
Organization: Navajo County (AZ)

AI Summary

  • Core Issue: The County did not meet the federal requirement to spend at least 20% of WIOA Youth Activities funds on paid and unpaid work experiences, spending only 11% instead.
  • Impacted Requirements: Federal regulations mandate that at least 20% of WIOA Youth Activities funds be earmarked for work experiences, along with proper monitoring and reporting of expenditures.
  • Recommended Follow-Up: The Department should ensure compliance by developing strategies for youth recruitment, monitoring spending closely, and adjusting allocations to meet the earmarking requirement.

Finding Text

Cluster name: WIOA Cluster Assistance Listings numbers and names: 17.258 WIOA Adult Program 17.259 WIOA Youth Activities 17.278 WIOA Dislocated Worker Formula Grants Award number and year: DI21-002285 A1, April 1, 2020 through June 30, 2022 Federal agency: U.S. Department of Labor Pass-through grantor: Arizona Department of Economic Security Compliance requirement: Earmarking Questioned costs: $27,180 Condition?Contrary to federal regulation, the County's Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Department failed to ensure that it spent the required 20 percent, or $68,164, of WIOA Youth Activities monies earmarked to provide in-school and out-of-school youth with paid and unpaid work experiences from April 2020 through June 2022. Instead, the County spent only 11 percent, or $40,985, of the required 20 percent and spent the remaining 9 percent, or $27,180, for other youth activities, such as education and youth development. Effect?County youth did not receive $27,180 of paid and unpaid work experience services that the federal program intended. Also, the Department may have received $27,180 in federal program monies that it was not entitled to. Cause?The Department used a tracking mechanism to accurately report its paid and unpaid work experiences spending throughout the fiscal year but did not properly monitor its WIOA Youth Activities spending to ensure the 20 percent earmarking requirement was met. Further, the Department did not include in its policies and procedures a requirement for its WIOA Youth Activities program to ensure it developed an effective strategy to recruit and retain qualified in-school and out-of-school youth who would benefit from paid and unpaid work experiences, monitored its paid and unpaid work experience expenditures throughout the award period, and adjusted spending when work experience participation was lower than expected. Criteria?Federal regulation requires the Department to earmark and spend no less than 20 percent of its WIOA Youth Activities monies to provide in-school and out-of-school youth with paid and unpaid work experiences. Additionally, federal regulation also requires the Department to monitor such expenditures and report them to the pass-through grantor monthly throughout the award period to ensure it is spending the monies in a timely manner to meet the earmarking requirement (20 Code of Federal Regulations [CFR] ?681.590). Federal regulation also requires establishing and maintaining effective internal control over federal awards that provides reasonable assurance that federal programs are being managed in compliance with all applicable laws, regulations, and award terms (2 CFR ?200.303). Recommendations?The Department should: 1. Spend no less than the required 20 percent of its WIOA Youth Activities monies to provide in-school and out-of-school youth with paid and unpaid work experiences. 2. Include a process in its WIOA Youth Activities program?s policies and procedures to: a. Develop an effective strategy to recruit and retain qualified in-school and out-of-school youth who will benefit from the paid and unpaid work experience the program provides. b. Monitor its paid and unpaid work experiences spending throughout the award period. c. Adjust spending to meet the earmarking requirement if work experience participation is lower than expected. The County?s corrective action plan at the end of this report includes the views and planned corrective action of its responsible officials. We are not required to audit and have not audited these responses and planned corrective actions and therefore provide no assurances as to their accuracy. This finding is similar to prior-year finding 2021-101.

Categories

Questioned Costs Matching / Level of Effort / Earmarking

Other Findings in this Audit

  • 28833 2022-101
    Material Weakness
  • 28834 2022-102
    Material Weakness
  • 28835 2022-103
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 28836 2022-102
    Material Weakness
  • 28837 2022-103
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 28838 2022-102
    Material Weakness
  • 28839 2022-103
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 28840 2022-104
    Material Weakness
  • 605275 2022-101
    Material Weakness
  • 605276 2022-102
    Material Weakness
  • 605278 2022-102
    Material Weakness
  • 605279 2022-103
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 605280 2022-102
    Material Weakness
  • 605281 2022-103
    Material Weakness Repeat
  • 605282 2022-104
    Material Weakness

Programs in Audit

ALN Program Name Expenditures
21.027 Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds $10.00M
93.323 Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases (elc) $1.80M
10.665 Schools and Roads - Grants to States $907,511
17.258 Wia Adult Program $879,038
17.259 Wia Youth Activities $430,582
10.557 Wic - Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children $301,581
95.001 High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program $222,212
93.069 Public Health Emergency Preparedness $206,905
84.371 Comprehensive Literacy Development" $160,000
16.575 Crime Victim Assistance $157,569
97.042 Emergency Management Performance Grants $157,234
93.136 Injury Prevention and Control Research and State and Community Based Programs $141,678
17.278 Wia Dislocated Worker Formula Grants $135,836
93.354 Public Health Emergency Response: Cooperative Agreement for Emergency Response: Public Health Crisis Response $118,929
16.922 Equitable Sharing Program $111,090
93.994 Maternal and Child Health Services Block Grant to the States $102,433
93.268 Immunization Cooperative Agreements $89,860
93.563 Child Support Enforcement $76,175
16.738 Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant Program $75,984
21.019 Coronavirus Relief Fund $66,945
16.034 Coronavirus Emergency Supplemental Funding Program $63,750
93.758 Preventive Health and Health Services Block Grant Funded Solely with Prevention and Public Health Funds (pphf) $53,753
20.600 State and Community Highway Safety $46,665
10.664 Cooperative Forestry Assistance $40,982
16.588 Violence Against Women Formula Grants $30,461
32.009 Emergency Connectivity Fund Program $25,141
45.310 Grants to States $21,057
93.940 Hiv Prevention Activities_health Department Based $17,598
93.788 Opioid Str $13,924
90.404 2018 Hava Election Security Grants $5,278
97.067 Homeland Security Grant Program $2,227
93.977 Preventive Health Services_sexually Transmitted Diseases Control Grants $1,653
93.424 Non-Aca/pphf?building Capacity of the Public Health System to Improve Population Health Through National Nonprofit Organizations $480