Finding 946665 (2022-002)

Significant Deficiency Repeat Finding
Requirement
P
Questioned Costs
-
Year
2022
Accepted
2024-02-23

AI Summary

  • Core Issue: There were discrepancies between the meals claimed for reimbursement and the actual meals served, leading to potential excess claims.
  • Impacted Requirements: Monthly claims must accurately reflect federal meal service requirements and be reconciled with actual meal counts.
  • Recommended Follow-Up: Implement a review process to ensure claims are reconciled with actual meals served, using the updated Skyward system for accurate tracking.

Finding Text

2022-002 Program Affected – Child Nutrition Cluster – Assistance Listing No. 10.555, 10.556, 10.559 Criteria: The Uniform Guidance requires the local program operator to submit monthly claims for reimbursement to the administering agency. All meals claimed for reimbursement must meet federal requirements and be served to eligible children. Condition: Audit sampling revealed variances between total meals claimed in monthly food service claims and the meal count sheets that the District used to track meals served to students. Cause: Meal counts were not accurately reported on the claim forms in the months sampled. Effect: Excess reimbursement amounts claimed may be disallowed and, if any, the excess may need to be returned to the federal agency. Questioned Cost: Unknown. Repeat Finding: Yes. Auditor’s Recommendation: We recommend the District set up a review procedure to review the claims and reconcile the claims to actual meals served. District Response: The District has reviewed procedures and implemented a system to review the claims and reconcile the claims to actual meals served. This will be done by entering the actual meals served in our computer system (Skyward) on an ongoing basis at the point of service, meaning the meals are entered daily into the system as students/staff go through the food service line at their school. This is a change from the past–during COVID, when all meals were served free to all students. At that time, our previous food service director used a manual, “tally” method, as a result of being short staffed. Now, we have a new food service director and we are going to keep all of our meal counts up to date in Skyward, as opposed to using the manual, “tally” method from the past two years.

Categories

Cash Management School Nutrition Programs

Other Findings in this Audit

  • 370222 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 370223 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 370224 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 370225 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 370226 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 370227 2022-003
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 370228 2022-004
    Significant Deficiency
  • 946664 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 946666 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 946667 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 946668 2022-002
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 946669 2022-003
    Significant Deficiency Repeat
  • 946670 2022-004
    Significant Deficiency

Programs in Audit

ALN Program Name Expenditures
84.027 Special Education_grants to States $507,418
84.010 Title I Grants to Local Educational Agencies $295,068
93.778 Medical Assistance Program $226,348
10.553 School Breakfast Program $215,605
10.559 Summer Food Service Program for Children $105,708
84.425 Education Stabilization Fund $82,448
10.555 National School Lunch Program $72,313
84.060 Indian Education_grants to Local Educational Agencies $47,732
84.367 Improving Teacher Quality State Grants $37,217
84.365 English Language Acquisition State Grants $20,100
84.173 Special Education_preschool Grants $15,321
84.424 Student Support and Academic Enrichment Program $14,046
84.048 Career and Technical Education -- Basic Grants to States $10,899