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This is historical material, "frozen in time."
The web site is no longer updated and links to external web sites and some internal pages will not work.
Circular No. A-133 - Revised June 24, 1997 Audits of
States, Local Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations
TO THE HEADS OF EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS AND ESTABLISHMENTS
SUBJECT: Audits of States, Local Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations
1. Purpose. This Circular is issued pursuant to the Single Audit Act of 1984, P.L.
98-502, and the Single Audit Act Amendments of 1996, P.L. 104-156. It sets forth standards for
obtaining consistency and uniformity among Federal agencies for the audit of States, local
governments, and non-profit organizations expending Federal awards.
2. Authority. Circular A-133 is issued under the authority of sections 503, 1111,
and 7501 et seq.
of title 31, United States Code, and Executive Orders 8248 and 11541.
3. Rescission and Supersession. This Circular rescinds Circular A-128, "Audits of
State and
Local Governments," issued April 12, 1985, and supersedes the prior Circular A-133, "Audits of
Institutions of Higher Education and Other Non-Profit Institutions," issued April 22, 1996. For
effective dates, see paragraph 10.
4. Policy. Except as provided herein, the standards set forth in this Circular shall be
applied by all
Federal agencies. If any statute specifically prescribes policies or specific requirements that
differ
from the standards provided herein, the provisions of the subsequent statute shall govern.
Federal agencies shall apply the provisions of the sections of this Circular to non-Federal
entities,
whether they are recipients expending Federal awards received directly from Federal awarding
agencies, or are subrecipients expending Federal awards received from a pass-through entity (a
recipient or another subrecipient).
This Circular does not apply to non-U.S. based entities expending Federal awards received
either
directly as a recipient or indirectly as a subrecipient.
5. Definitions. The definitions of key terms used in this Circular are contained in
§___.105 in the
Attachment to this Circular.
6. Required Action. The specific requirements and responsibilities of Federal
agencies and non-Federal entities are set forth in the Attachment to this Circular. Federal
agencies making awards
to non-Federal entities, either directly or indirectly, shall adopt the language in the Circular in
codified regulations as provided in Section 10 (below), unless different provisions are required
by
Federal statute or are approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
7. OMB Responsibilities. OMB will review Federal agency regulations and
implementation of this
Circular, and will provide interpretations of policy requirements and assistance to ensure
uniform,
effective and efficient implementation.
8. Information Contact. Further information concerning Circular A-133 may be
obtained by
contacting the Financial Standards and Reporting Branch, Office of Federal Financial
Management, Office of Management and Budget, Washington, DC 20503, telephone (202)
395-3993.
9. Review Date. This Circular will have a policy review three years from the date of
issuance.
10. Effective Dates. The standards set forth in §___.400 of the Attachment to
this Circular,
which apply directly to Federal agencies, shall be effective July 1, 1996, and shall apply to audits
of fiscal years beginning after June 30, 1996, except as otherwise specified in §___.400(a).
The standards set forth in this Circular that Federal agencies shall apply to non-Federal
entities
shall be adopted by Federal agencies in codified regulations not later than 60 days after
publication of this final revision in the Federal Register, so that they will apply to audits
of fiscal
years beginning after June 30, 1996, with the exception that §___.305(b) of the
Attachment
applies to audits of fiscal years beginning after June 30, 1998. The requirements of Circular
A-128, although the Circular is rescinded, and the 1990 version of Circular A-133 remain in
effect
for audits of fiscal years beginning on or before June 30, 1996.
Franklin D. Raines Director
Attachment
PART__ --AUDITS OF STATES, LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, AND NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATIONS
__.200 Audit requirements.
__.205 Basis for determining Federal awards expended.
__.210 Subrecipient and vendor determinations.
__.215 Relation to other audit requirements.
__.220 Frequency of audits.
__.225 Sanctions.
__.230 Audit costs.
__.235 Program-specific audits.
__.500 Scope of audit.
__.505 Audit reporting.
__.510 Audit findings.
__.515 Audit working papers.
__.520 Major program determination.
__.525 Criteria for Federal program risk.
__.530 Criteria for a low-risk auditee.
Appendix A to Part __ - Data Collection Form (Form SF-SAC).
Appendix B to Part __ - Circular A-133 Compliance Supplement.
This part sets forth standards for obtaining consistency and uniformity among Federal
agencies for
the audit of non-Federal entities expending Federal awards.
§___.105 Definitions.
Auditee means any non-Federal entity that expends Federal awards which must be
audited under
this part. Auditor means an auditor, that is a public accountant
or a Federal, State or local government
audit organization, which meets the general standards specified in generally accepted government
auditing standards (GAGAS). The term auditor does not include internal auditors of
non-profit
organizations.
Audit finding means deficiencies which the auditor
is required by §___.510(a) to report in the
schedule of findings and questioned costs.
CFDA number means the number assigned to a Federal program in the Catalog
of Federal
Domestic Assistance (CFDA).
Cluster of programs means a grouping of closely related programs that share
common compliance
requirements. The types of clusters of programs are research and development (R&D),
student
financial aid (SFA), and other clusters. "Other clusters" are as defined by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) in the compliance supplement or as designated by a State for
Federal awards the State provides to its subrecipients that meet the definition of a cluster of
programs. When designating an "other cluster," a State shall identify the Federal awards
included
in the cluster and advise the subrecipients of compliance requirements applicable to the cluster,
consistent with §___.400(d)(1) and
§___.400(d)(2), respectively. A cluster of programs shall be
considered as one program for determining major programs, as described in
§___.520, and, with
the exception of R&D as described in §___.200(c), whether a
program-specific audit may be
elected.
Cognizant agency for audit means the Federal agency designated to carry out the
responsibilities
described in §___.400(a).
Compliance supplement refers to the Circular A-133 Compliance
Supplement, included as
Appendix B to Circular A-133, or such documents as OMB or its designee may issue to replace
it. This document is available from the Government Printing Office, Superintendent of
Documents, Washington, DC 20402-9325.
Corrective action means action taken by the auditee that:
(1) Corrects identified deficiencies;
(2) Produces recommended improvements; or
(3) Demonstrates that audit findings are either invalid or do not warrant auditee action.
Federal agency has the same meaning as the term agency in Section 551(1)
of title 5, United States Code.
Federal award means Federal financial assistance and
Federal cost-reimbursement contracts that
non-Federal entities receive directly from Federal awarding agencies or indirectly from
pass-through entities. It does not include procurement contracts, under grants or contracts, used
to
buy goods or services from vendors. Any audits of such vendors shall be covered by the terms
and conditions of the contract. Contracts to operate Federal Government owned, contractor
operated facilities (GOCOs) are excluded from the requirements of this part.
Federal awarding agency means the Federal agency that provides an award directly
to the
recipient.
Federal financial assistance means assistance that non-Federal entities receive or
administer in the
form of grants, loans, loan guarantees, property (including donated surplus property),
cooperative agreements, interest subsidies, insurance, food commodities, direct appropriations,
and other assistance, but does not include amounts received as reimbursement for services
rendered to individuals as described in §___.205(h) and
§___.205(i).
Federal program means:
(1) All Federal awards to a non-Federal entity assigned a single number in the CFDA.
(2) When no CFDA number is assigned, all Federal awards from the same agency made for
the
same purpose should be combined and considered one program.
(3) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2) of this
definition, a cluster of programs. The types of
clusters of programs are:
(i) Research and development (R&D);
(ii) Student financial aid (SFA); and
(iii) "Other clusters," as described in the definition of cluster of programs in this section.
GAGAS means generally accepted government auditing standards issued by the
Comptroller
General of the United States, which are applicable to financial audits.
Generally accepted accounting principles has the meaning specified in generally
accepted auditing
standards issued by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA).
Indian tribe means any Indian tribe, band, nation, or other organized group or
community,
including any Alaskan Native village or regional or village corporation (as defined in, or
established under, the Alaskan Native Claims Settlement Act) that is recognized by the United
States as eligible for the special programs and services provided by the United States to Indians
because of their status as Indians.
Internal control means a process, effected by an entity's management and other
personnel,
designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the achievement of objectives in the
following
categories:
(1) Effectiveness and efficiency of operations;
(2) Reliability of financial reporting; and
(3) Compliance with applicable laws and regulations.
Internal control pertaining to the compliance requirements for Federal programs
(Internal control
over Federal programs) means a process--effected by an entity's management and other
personnel--designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the achievement of the following
objectives
for Federal programs:
(1) Transactions are properly recorded and accounted for to:
(i) Permit the preparation of reliable financial statements and Federal reports;
(ii) Maintain accountability over assets; and
(iii) Demonstrate compliance with laws, regulations, and other compliance requirements;
(2) Transactions are executed in compliance with:
(i) Laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant agreements that could have a
direct
and material effect on a Federal program; and
(ii) Any other laws and regulations that are identified in the compliance supplement; and
(3) Funds, property, and other assets are safeguarded against loss from unauthorized use or
disposition.
Loan means a Federal loan or loan guarantee received or administered by a
non-Federal entity.
Local government means any unit of local government within a State, including a
county,
borough, municipality, city, town, township, parish, local public authority, special district, school
district, intrastate district, council of governments, and any other instrumentality of local
government.
Major program means a Federal program determined by the auditor to be a major
program in
accordance with §___.520 or a program identified as a major program
by a Federal agency or
pass-through entity in accordance with §___.215(c).
Management decision means the evaluation by the Federal awarding agency or
pass-through
entity of the audit findings and corrective action plan and the issuance of a written decision as to
what corrective action is necessary.
Non-Federal entity means a State, local government, or non-profit organization.
Non-profit organization means:
(1) any corporation, trust, association, cooperative, or other organization that:
(i) Is operated primarily for scientific, educational, service, charitable, or similar purposes in
the
public interest;
(ii) Is not organized primarily for profit; and
(iii) Uses its net proceeds to maintain, improve, or expand its operations; and
(2) The term non-profit organization includes non-profit institutions of higher
education and
hospitals.
OMB means the Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and
Budget.
Oversight agency for audit means the Federal awarding agency that provides the
predominant
amount of direct funding to a recipient not assigned a cognizant agency for audit. When there is
no direct funding, the Federal agency with the predominant indirect funding shall assume the
oversight responsibilities. The duties of the oversight agency for audit are described in
§___.400(b).
Pass-through entity means a non-Federal entity that provides a Federal award to a
subrecipient to
carry out a Federal program.
Program-specific audit means an audit of one Federal program as provided for in
§___.200(c) and
§___.235.
Questioned cost means a cost that is questioned by the auditor because of an audit
finding:
(1) Which resulted from a violation or possible violation of a provision of a law, regulation,
contract, grant, cooperative agreement, or other agreement or document governing the use of
Federal funds, including funds used to match Federal funds;
(2) Where the costs, at the time of the audit, are not supported by adequate documentation; or
(3) Where the costs incurred appear unreasonable and do not reflect the actions a prudent
person
would take in the circumstances.
Recipient means a non-Federal entity that expends Federal awards received directly
from a
Federal awarding agency to carry out a Federal program.
Research and development (R&D) means all research activities, both basic and
applied, and all
development activities that are performed by a non-Federal entity. Research is defined
as a
systematic study directed toward fuller scientific knowledge or understanding of the subject
studied. The term research also includes activities involving the training of individuals in
research
techniques where such activities utilize the same facilities as other research and development
activities and where such activities are not included in the instruction function.
Development is
the systematic use of knowledge and understanding gained from research directed toward the
production of useful materials, devices, systems, or methods, including design and development
of
prototypes and processes.
Single audit means an audit which includes both the entity's financial statements and
the Federal
awards as described in §___.500.
State means any State of the United States, the District of Columbia, the
Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands, and the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, any instrumentality thereof, any
multi-State, regional, or interstate entity which has governmental functions, and any Indian tribe
as defined in this section.
Student Financial Aid (SFA) includes those programs of general student assistance,
such as those
authorized by Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended, (20 U.S.C. 1070 et
seq.) which is administered by the U.S. Department of Education, and similar programs
provided
by other Federal agencies. It does not include programs which provide fellowships or similar
Federal awards to students on a competitive basis, or for specified studies or research.
Subrecipient means a non-Federal entity that expends Federal awards received from
a pass-through entity to carry out a Federal program, but does not include an individual that is a
beneficiary of such a program. A subrecipient may also be a recipient of other Federal awards
directly from a Federal awarding agency. Guidance on distinguishing between a subrecipient and
a vendor is provided in §___.210.
Types of compliance requirements refers to the types of compliance requirements
listed in the
compliance supplement. Examples include: activities allowed or unallowed; allowable costs/cost
principles; cash management; eligibility; matching, level of effort, earmarking; and, reporting.
Vendor means a dealer, distributor, merchant, or other seller providing goods or
services that are
required for the conduct of a Federal program. These goods or services may be for an
organization's own use or for the use of beneficiaries of the Federal program. Additional
guidance on distinguishing between a subrecipient and a vendor is provided in
§___.210.
(a) Audit required. Non-Federal entities that expend $300,000 or more in a year in
Federal
awards shall have a single or program-specific audit conducted for that year in accordance with
the provisions of this part. Guidance on determining Federal awards expended is provided in
§___.205.
(b) Single audit. Non-Federal entities that expend $300,000 or more in a year in
Federal awards
shall have a single audit conducted in accordance with §___.500 except
when they elect to have a
program-specific audit conducted in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) Program-specific audit election. When an auditee expends Federal awards under
only one
Federal program (excluding R&D) and the Federal program's laws, regulations, or grant
agreements do not require a financial statement audit of the auditee, the auditee may elect to have
a program-specific audit conducted in accordance with §___.235. A
program-specific audit may
not be elected for R&D unless all of the Federal awards expended were received from the
same
Federal agency, or the same Federal agency and the same pass-through entity, and that Federal
agency, or pass-through entity in the case of a subrecipient, approves in advance a
program-specific audit.
(d) Exemption when Federal awards expended are less than $300,000. Non-Federal
entities that
expend less than $300,000 a year in Federal awards are exempt from Federal audit requirements
for that year, except as noted in §___.215(a), but records must be
available for review or audit by
appropriate officials of the Federal agency, pass-through entity, and General Accounting Office
(GAO).
(e) Federally Funded Research and Development Centers (FFRDC). Management
of an auditee
that owns or operates a FFRDC may elect to treat the FFRDC as a separate entity for purposes of
this part.
§___.205 Basis for determining Federal awards expended.
(a) Determining Federal awards expended. The determination of when an award is
expended
should be based on when the activity related to the award occurs. Generally, the activity pertains
to events that require the non-Federal entity to comply with laws, regulations, and the provisions
of contracts or grant agreements, such as: expenditure/expense transactions associated with
grants, cost-reimbursement contracts, cooperative agreements, and direct appropriations; the
disbursement of funds passed through to subrecipients; the use of loan proceeds under loan and
loan guarantee programs; the receipt of property; the receipt of surplus property; the receipt or
use of program income; the distribution or consumption of food commodities; the disbursement
of
amounts entitling the non-Federal entity to an interest subsidy; and, the period when insurance is
in force.
(b) Loan and loan guarantees (loans). Since the Federal Government is at risk for
loans until the
debt is repaid, the following guidelines shall be used to calculate the value of Federal awards
expended under loan programs, except as noted in paragraphs (c) and
(d) of this section:
(1) Value of new loans made or received during the fiscal year; plus
(2) Balance of loans from previous years for which the Federal Government imposes
continuing
compliance requirements; plus
(3) Any interest subsidy, cash, or administrative cost allowance received.
(c) Loan and loan guarantees (loans) at institutions of higher education. When loans
are made to
students of an institution of higher education but the institution does not make the loans, then
only
the value of loans made during the year shall be considered Federal awards expended in that year.
The balance of loans for previous years is not included as Federal awards expended because the
lender accounts for the prior balances.
(d) Prior loan and loan guarantees (loans). Loans, the proceeds of which were
received and
expended in prior-years, are not considered Federal awards expended under this part when the
laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant agreements pertaining to such loans
impose no continuing compliance requirements other than to repay the loans.
(e) Endowment funds. The cumulative balance of Federal awards for endowment
funds which are
federally restricted are considered awards expended in each year in which the funds are still
restricted.
(f) Free rent. Free rent received by itself is not considered a Federal award
expended under this
part. However, free rent received as part of an award to carry out a Federal program shall be
included in determining Federal awards expended and subject to audit under this part.
(g) Valuing non-cash assistance. Federal non-cash assistance, such as free rent, food
stamps, food
commodities, donated property, or donated surplus property, shall be valued at fair market value
at the time of receipt or the assessed value provided by the Federal agency.
(h) Medicare. Medicare payments to a non-Federal entity for providing patient care
services to
Medicare eligible individuals are not considered Federal awards expended under this part.
(i) Medicaid. Medicaid payments to a subrecipient for providing patient care
services to Medicaid
eligible individuals are not considered Federal awards expended under this part unless a State
requires the funds to be treated as Federal awards expended because reimbursement is on a
cost-reimbursement basis.
(j) Certain loans provided by the National Credit Union Administration. For
purposes of this part,
loans made from the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund and the Central Liquidity
Facility that are funded by contributions from insured institutions are not considered Federal
awards expended.
§___.210 Subrecipient and vendor determinations.
(a) General. An auditee may be a recipient, a subrecipient, and a vendor. Federal
awards
expended as a recipient or a subrecipient would be subject to audit under this part. The payments
received for goods or services provided as a vendor would not be considered Federal awards.
The guidance in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section
should be considered in determining
whether payments constitute a Federal award or a payment for goods and services.
(b) Federal award. Characteristics indicative of a Federal award received by a
subrecipient are
when the organization:
(1) Determines who is eligible to receive what Federal financial assistance;
(2) Has its performance measured against whether the objectives of the Federal program are
met;
(3) Has responsibility for programmatic decision making;
(4) Has responsibility for adherence to applicable Federal program compliance requirements;
and
(5) Uses the Federal funds to carry out a program of the organization as compared to
providing
goods or services for a program of the pass-through entity.
(c) Payment for goods and services. Characteristics indicative of a payment for
goods and
services received by a vendor are when the organization:
(1) Provides the goods and services within normal business operations;
(2) Provides similar goods or services to many different purchasers;
(3) Operates in a competitive environment;
(4) Provides goods or services that are ancillary to the operation of the Federal program; and
(5) Is not subject to compliance requirements of the Federal program.
(d) Use of judgment in making determination. There may be unusual circumstances
or exceptions
to the listed characteristics. In making the determination of whether a subrecipient or vendor
relationship exists, the substance of the relationship is more important than the form of the
agreement. It is not expected that all of the characteristics will be present and judgment should
be
used in determining whether an entity is a subrecipient or vendor.
(e) For-profit subrecipient. Since this part does not apply to for-profit subrecipients,
the pass-through entity is responsible for establishing requirements, as necessary, to ensure
compliance by
for-profit subrecipients. The contract with the for-profit subrecipient should describe applicable
compliance requirements and the for-profit subrecipient's compliance responsibility. Methods to
ensure compliance for Federal awards made to for-profit subrecipients may include pre-award
audits, monitoring during the contract, and post-award audits.
(f) Compliance responsibility for vendors. In most cases, the auditee's compliance
responsibility
for vendors is only to ensure that the procurement, receipt, and payment for goods and services
comply with laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant agreements. Program
compliance requirements normally do not pass through to vendors. However, the auditee is
responsible for ensuring compliance for vendor transactions which are structured such that the
vendor is responsible for program compliance or the vendor's records must be reviewed to
determine program compliance. Also, when these vendor transactions relate to a major program,
the scope of the audit shall include determining whether these transactions are in compliance
with
laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant agreements.
§___.215 Relation to other audit requirements.
(a) Audit under this part in lieu of other audits. An audit made in accordance with
this part shall
be in lieu of any financial audit required under individual Federal awards. To the extent this
audit
meets a Federal agency's needs, it shall rely upon and use such audits. The provisions of this part
neither limit the authority of Federal agencies, including their Inspectors General, or GAO to
conduct or arrange for additional audits (e.g., financial audits, performance audits, evaluations,
inspections, or reviews) nor authorize any auditee to constrain Federal agencies from carrying out
additional audits. Any additional audits shall be planned and performed in such a way as to build
upon work performed by other auditors.
(b) Federal agency to pay for additional audits. A Federal agency that conducts or
contracts for
additional audits shall, consistent with other applicable laws and regulations, arrange for funding
the full cost of such additional audits.
(c) Request for a program to be audited as a major program. A Federal agency may
request an
auditee to have a particular Federal program audited as a major program in lieu of the Federal
agency conducting or arranging for the additional audits. To allow for planning, such requests
should be made at least 180 days prior to the end of the fiscal year to be audited. The auditee,
after consultation with its auditor, should promptly respond to such request by informing the
Federal agency whether the program would otherwise be audited as a major program using the
risk-based audit approach described in §___.520 and, if not, the
estimated incremental cost. The
Federal agency shall then promptly confirm to the auditee whether it wants the program audited
as a major program. If the program is to be audited as a major program based upon this Federal
agency request, and the Federal agency agrees to pay the full incremental costs, then the auditee
shall have the program audited as a major program. A pass-through entity may use the
provisions
of this paragraph for a subrecipient.
§___.220 Frequency of audits.
Except for the provisions for biennial audits provided in paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section,
audits required by this part shall be performed annually. Any biennial audit shall cover both
years
within the biennial period.
(a) A State or local government that is required by constitution or statute, in effect on January
1,
1987, to undergo its audits less frequently than annually, is permitted to undergo its audits
pursuant to this part biennially. This requirement must still be in effect for the biennial period
under audit.
(b) Any non-profit organization that had biennial audits for all biennial periods ending
between
July 1, 1992, and January 1, 1995, is permitted to undergo its audits pursuant to this part
biennially.
§___.225 Sanctions.
No audit costs may be charged to Federal awards when audits required by this part have not
been
made or have been made but not in accordance with this part. In cases of continued inability or
unwillingness to have an audit conducted in accordance with this part, Federal agencies and
pass-through entities shall take appropriate action using sanctions such as:
(a) Withholding a percentage of Federal awards until the audit is completed satisfactorily;
(b) Withholding or disallowing overhead costs;
(c) Suspending Federal awards until the audit is conducted; or
(d) Terminating the Federal award.
§___.230 Audit costs.
(a) Allowable costs. Unless prohibited by law, the cost of audits made in
accordance with the
provisions of this part are allowable charges to Federal awards. The charges may be considered a
direct cost or an allocated indirect cost, as determined in accordance with the provisions of
applicable OMB cost principles circulars, the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) (48 CFR
parts 30 and 31), or other applicable cost principles or regulations.
(b) Unallowable costs. A non-Federal entity shall not charge the following to a
Federal award:
(1) The cost of any audit under the Single Audit Act Amendments of 1996 (31 U.S.C. 7501
et
seq.) not conducted in accordance with this part.
(2) The cost of auditing a non-Federal entity which has Federal awards expended of less than
$300,000 per year and is thereby exempted under §___.200(d) from
having an audit conducted
under this part. However, this does not prohibit a pass-through entity from charging Federal
awards for the cost of limited scope audits to monitor its subrecipients in accordance with
§___.400(d)(3), provided the subrecipient does not have a single audit.
For purposes of this part,
limited scope audits only include agreed-upon procedures engagements conducted in accordance
with either the AICPA's generally accepted auditing standards or attestation standards, that are
paid for and arranged by a pass-through entity and address only one or more of the following
types of compliance requirements: activities allowed or unallowed; allowable costs/cost
principles; eligibility; matching, level of effort, earmarking; and, reporting.
§___.235 Program-specific audits.
(a) Program-specific audit guide available. In many cases, a program-specific audit
guide will be
available to provide specific guidance to the auditor with respect to internal control, compliance
requirements, suggested audit procedures, and audit reporting requirements. The auditor should
contact the Office of Inspector General of the Federal agency to determine whether such a guide
is available. When a current program-specific audit guide is available, the auditor shall follow
GAGAS and the guide when performing a program-specific audit.
(b) Program-specific audit guide not available. (1) When a program-specific audit
guide is not
available, the auditee and auditor shall have basically the same responsibilities for the Federal
program as they would have for an audit of a major program in a single audit.
(2) The auditee shall prepare the financial statement(s) for the Federal program that includes,
at a
minimum, a schedule of expenditures of Federal awards for the program and notes that describe
the significant accounting policies used in preparing the schedule, a summary schedule of prior
audit findings consistent with the requirements of §___.315(b), and a
corrective action plan
consistent with the requirements of §___.315(c).
(3) The auditor shall:
(i) Perform an audit of the financial statement(s) for the Federal program in accordance with
GAGAS;
(ii) Obtain an understanding of internal control and perform tests of internal control over the
Federal program consistent with the requirements of §___.500(c) for a
major program;
(iii) Perform procedures to determine whether the auditee has complied with laws,
regulations,
and the provisions of contracts or grant agreements that could have a direct and material effect on
the Federal program consistent with the requirements of §___.500(d) for
a major program; and
(iv) Follow up on prior audit findings, perform procedures to assess the reasonableness of the
summary schedule of prior audit findings prepared by the auditee, and report, as a current year
audit finding, when the auditor concludes that the summary schedule of prior audit findings
materially misrepresents the status of any prior audit finding in accordance with the requirements
of §___.500(e).
(4) The auditor's report(s) may be in the form of either combined or separate reports and may
be
organized differently from the manner presented in this section. The auditor's report(s) shall state
that the audit was conducted in accordance with this part and include the following:
(i) An opinion (or disclaimer of opinion) as to whether the financial statement(s) of the
Federal
program is presented fairly in all material respects in conformity with the stated accounting
policies;
(ii) A report on internal control related to the Federal program, which shall describe the
scope of
testing of internal control and the results of the tests;
(iii) A report on compliance which includes an opinion (or disclaimer of opinion) as to
whether
the auditee complied with laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant agreements
which could have a direct and material effect on the Federal program; and
(iv) A schedule of findings and questioned costs for the Federal program that includes a
summary
of the auditor's results relative to the Federal program in a format consistent with
§___.505(d)(1)
and findings and questioned costs consistent with the requirements of
§___.505(d)(3).
(c) Report submission for program-specific audits.
(1) The audit shall be completed and the reporting required by paragraph
(c)(2) or (c)(3) of this
section submitted within the earlier of 30 days after receipt of the auditor's report(s), or nine
months after the end of the audit period, unless a longer period is agreed to in advance by the
Federal agency that provided the funding or a different period is specified in a program-specific
audit guide. (However, for fiscal years beginning on or before June 30, 1998, the audit shall be
completed and the required reporting shall be submitted within the earlier of 30 days after receipt
of the auditor's report(s), or 13 months after the end of the audit period, unless a different period
is specified in a program-specific audit guide.) Unless restricted by law or regulation, the auditee
shall make report copies available for public inspection.
(2) When a program-specific audit guide is available, the auditee shall submit to the Federal
clearinghouse designated by OMB the data collection form prepared in accordance with
§___.320(b), as applicable to a program-specific audit, and the reporting
required by the
program-specific audit guide to be retained as an archival copy. Also, the auditee shall submit to
the Federal awarding agency or pass-through entity the reporting required by the
program-specific
audit guide.
(3) When a program-specific audit guide is not available, the reporting package for a
program-specific audit shall consist of the financial statement(s) of the Federal program, a
summary
schedule of prior audit findings, and a corrective action plan as described in paragraph
(b)(2) of
this section, and the auditor's report(s) described in paragraph (b)(4) of this
section. The data
collection form prepared in accordance with §___.320(b), as applicable
to a program-specific
audit, and one copy of this reporting package shall be submitted to the Federal clearinghouse
designated by OMB to be retained as an archival copy. Also, when the schedule of findings and
questioned costs disclosed audit findings or the summary schedule of prior audit findings
reported
the status of any audit findings, the auditee shall submit one copy of the reporting package to the
Federal clearinghouse on behalf of the Federal awarding agency, or directly to the pass-through
entity in the case of a subrecipient. Instead of submitting the reporting package to the
pass-through entity, when a subrecipient is not required to submit a reporting package to the
pass-through entity, the subrecipient shall provide written notification to the pass-through entity,
consistent with the requirements of §___.320(e)(2). A subrecipient may
submit a copy of the
reporting package to the pass-through entity to comply with this notification requirement.
(d) Other sections of this part may apply. Program-specific audits are subject to
§___.100
through §___.215(b), §___.220 through
§___.230, §___.300 through
§___.305, §___.315,
§___.320(f) through §___.320(j),
§___.400 through §___.405,
§___.510 through §___.515, and
other referenced provisions of this part unless contrary to the provisions of this section, a
program-specific audit guide, or program laws and regulations.
(a) Identify, in its accounts, all Federal awards received and expended and the Federal
programs
under which they were received. Federal program and award identification shall include, as
applicable, the CFDA title and number, award number and year, name of the Federal agency, and
name of the pass-through entity.
(b) Maintain internal control over Federal programs that provides reasonable assurance that
the
auditee is managing Federal awards in compliance with laws, regulations, and the provisions of
contracts or grant agreements that could have a material effect on each of its Federal programs.
(c) Comply with laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant agreements
related to
each of its Federal programs.
(d) Prepare appropriate financial statements, including the schedule of expenditures of
Federal
awards in accordance with §___.310.
(e) Ensure that the audits required by this part are properly performed and submitted when
due.
When extensions to the report submission due date required by §___.320(a)
are granted by the
cognizant or oversight agency for audit, promptly notify the Federal clearinghouse designated by
OMB and each pass-through entity providing Federal awards of the extension.
(f) Follow up and take corrective action on audit findings, including preparation of a
summary
schedule of prior audit findings and a corrective action plan in accordance with
§___.315(b) and
§___.315(c), respectively.
§___.305 Auditor selection.
(a) Auditor procurement. In procuring audit services, auditees shall follow the
procurement
standards prescribed by the Grants Management Common Rule (hereinafter referred to as the
"A-102 Common Rule") published March 11, 1988 and amended April 19, 1995 [insert
appropriate
CFR citation], Circular A-110, "Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and
Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals and Other Non-Profit
Organizations," or the FAR (48 CFR part 42), as applicable (OMB Circulars are available from
the Office of Administration, Publications Office, room 2200, New Executive Office Building,
Washington, DC 20503). Whenever possible, auditees shall make positive efforts to utilize small
businesses, minority-owned firms, and women's business enterprises, in procuring audit services
as
stated in the A-102 Common Rule, OMB Circular A-110, or the FAR (48 CFR part 42), as
applicable. In requesting proposals for audit services, the objectives and scope of the audit
should
be made clear. Factors to be considered in evaluating each proposal for audit services include the
responsiveness to the request for proposal, relevant experience, availability of staff with
professional qualifications and technical abilities, the results of external quality control reviews,
and price.
(b) Restriction on auditor preparing indirect cost proposals. An auditor who
prepares the indirect
cost proposal or cost allocation plan may not also be selected to perform the audit required by
this
part when the indirect costs recovered by the auditee during the prior year exceeded $1 million.
This restriction applies to the base year used in the preparation of the indirect cost proposal or
cost allocation plan and any subsequent years in which the resulting indirect cost agreement or
cost allocation plan is used to recover costs. To minimize any disruption in existing contracts for
audit services, this paragraph applies to audits of fiscal years beginning after June 30, 1998.
(c) Use of Federal auditors. Federal auditors may perform all or part of the work
required under
this part if they comply fully with the requirements of this part.
§___.310 Financial statements.
(a) Financial statements. The auditee shall prepare financial statements that reflect
its financial
position, results of operations or changes in net assets, and, where appropriate, cash flows for the
fiscal year audited. The financial statements shall be for the same organizational unit and fiscal
year that is chosen to meet the requirements of this part. However, organization-wide financial
statements may also include departments, agencies, and other organizational units that have
separate audits in accordance with §___.500(a) and prepare separate
financial statements.
(b) Schedule of expenditures of Federal awards. The auditee shall also prepare a
schedule of
expenditures of Federal awards for the period covered by the auditee's financial statements.
While
not required, the auditee may choose to provide information requested by Federal awarding
agencies and pass-through entities to make the schedule easier to use. For example, when a
Federal program has multiple award years, the auditee may list the amount of Federal awards
expended for each award year separately. At a minimum, the schedule shall:
(1) List individual Federal programs by Federal agency. For Federal programs included in a
cluster of programs, list individual Federal programs within a cluster of programs. For
R&D,
total Federal awards expended shall be shown either by individual award or by Federal agency
and
major subdivision within the Federal agency. For example, the National Institutes of Health is a
major subdivision in the Department of Health and Human Services.
(2) For Federal awards received as a subrecipient, the name of the pass-through entity and
identifying number assigned by the pass-through entity shall be included.
(3) Provide total Federal awards expended for each individual Federal program and the
CFDA
number or other identifying number when the CFDA information is not available.
(4) Include notes that describe the significant accounting policies used in preparing the
schedule.
(5) To the extent practical, pass-through entities should identify in the schedule the total
amount
provided to subrecipients from each Federal program.
(6) Include, in either the schedule or a note to the schedule, the value of the Federal awards
expended in the form of non-cash assistance, the amount of insurance in effect during the year,
and loans or loan guarantees outstanding at year end. While not required, it is preferable to
present this information in the schedule.
§___.315 Audit findings follow-up.
(a) General. The auditee is responsible for follow-up and corrective action on all
audit findings.
As part of this responsibility, the auditee shall prepare a summary schedule of prior audit
findings.
The auditee shall also prepare a corrective action plan for current year audit findings. The
summary schedule of prior audit findings and the corrective action plan shall include the
reference
numbers the auditor assigns to audit findings under §___.510(c). Since
the summary schedule
may include audit findings from multiple years, it shall include the fiscal year in which the
finding
initially occurred.
(b) Summary schedule of prior audit findings. The summary schedule of prior audit
findings shall
report the status of all audit findings included in the prior audit's schedule of findings and
questioned costs relative to Federal awards. The summary schedule shall also include audit
findings reported in the prior audit's summary schedule of prior audit findings except audit
findings listed as corrected in accordance with paragraph (b)(1) of this section,
or no longer valid
or not warranting further action in accordance with paragraph (b)(4) of this
section.
(1) When audit findings were fully corrected, the summary schedule need only list the audit
findings and state that corrective action was taken.
(2) When audit findings were not corrected or were only partially corrected, the summary
schedule shall describe the planned corrective action as well as any partial corrective action
taken.
(3) When corrective action taken is significantly different from corrective action previously
reported in a corrective action plan or in the Federal agency's or pass-through entity's
management decision, the summary schedule shall provide an explanation.
(4) When the auditee believes the audit findings are no longer valid or do not warrant further
action, the reasons for this position shall be described in the summary schedule. A valid reason
for considering an audit finding as not warranting further action is that all of the following have
occurred:
(i) Two years have passed since the audit report in which the finding occurred was submitted
to
the Federal clearinghouse;
(ii) The Federal agency or pass-through entity is not currently following up with the auditee
on
the audit finding; and
(iii) A management decision was not issued.
(c) Corrective action plan. At the completion of the audit, the auditee shall prepare
a corrective
action plan to address each audit finding included in the current year auditor's reports. The
corrective action plan shall provide the name(s) of the contact person(s) responsible for
corrective
action, the corrective action planned, and the anticipated completion date. If the auditee does not
agree with the audit findings or believes corrective action is not required, then the corrective
action plan shall include an explanation and specific reasons.
§___.320 Report submission.
(a) General. The audit shall be completed and the data collection form described in
paragraph (b)
of this section and reporting package described in paragraph (c) of this section
shall be submitted
within the earlier of 30 days after receipt of the auditor's report(s), or nine months after the end of
the audit period, unless a longer period is agreed to in advance by the cognizant or oversight
agency for audit. (However, for fiscal years beginning on or before June 30, 1998, the audit shall
be completed and the data collection form and reporting package shall be submitted within the
earlier of 30 days after receipt of the auditor's report(s), or 13 months after the end of the audit
period.) Unless restricted by law or regulation, the auditee shall make copies available for public
inspection.
(b) Data Collection. (1) The auditee shall submit a data collection form which
states whether the
audit was completed in accordance with this part and provides information about the auditee, its
Federal programs, and the results of the audit. The form shall be approved by OMB, available
from the Federal clearinghouse designated by OMB, and include data elements similar to those
presented in this paragraph. A senior level representative of the auditee (e.g., State controller,
director of finance, chief executive officer, or chief financial officer) shall sign a statement to be
included as part of the form certifying that: the auditee complied with the requirements of this
part, the form was prepared in accordance with this part (and the instructions accompanying the
form), and the information included in the form, in its entirety, are accurate and complete.
(2) The data collection form shall include the following data elements:
(i) The type of report the auditor issued on the financial statements of the auditee (i.e.,
unqualified
opinion, qualified opinion, adverse opinion, or disclaimer of opinion).
(ii) Where applicable, a statement that reportable conditions in internal control were
disclosed by
the audit of the financial statements and whether any such conditions were material weaknesses.
(iii) A statement as to whether the audit disclosed any noncompliance which is material to
the
financial statements of the auditee.
(iv) Where applicable, a statement that reportable conditions in internal control over major
programs were disclosed by the audit and whether any such conditions were material
weaknesses.
(v) The type of report the auditor issued on compliance for major programs (i.e., unqualified
opinion, qualified opinion, adverse opinion, or disclaimer of opinion).
(vi) A list of the Federal awarding agencies which will receive a copy of the reporting
package
pursuant to §___.320(d)(2) of OMB Circular A-133.
(vii) A yes or no statement as to whether the auditee qualified as a low-risk auditee under
§___.530 of OMB Circular A-133.
(viii) The dollar threshold used to distinguish between Type A and Type B programs as
defined in
§___.520(b) of OMB Circular A-133.
(ix) The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) number for each Federal
program, as
applicable.
(x) The name of each Federal program and identification of each major program. Individual
programs within a cluster of programs should be listed in the same level of detail as they are
listed
in the schedule of expenditures of Federal awards.
(xi) The amount of expenditures in the schedule of expenditures of Federal awards associated
with each Federal program.
(xii) For each Federal program, a yes or no statement as to whether there are audit findings in
each of the following types of compliance requirements and the total amount of any questioned
costs:
(A) Activities allowed or unallowed.
(B) Allowable costs/cost principles.
(C) Cash management.
(D) Davis-Bacon Act.
(E) Eligibility.
(F) Equipment and real property management.
(G) Matching, level of effort, earmarking.
(H) Period of availability of Federal funds.
(I) Procurement and suspension and debarment.
(J) Program income.
(K) Real property acquisition and relocation assistance.
(L) Reporting.
(M) Subrecipient monitoring.
(N) Special tests and provisions.
(xiii) Auditee Name, Employer Identification Number(s), Name and Title of Certifying
Official,
Telephone Number, Signature, and Date.
(xiv) Auditor Name, Name and Title of Contact Person, Auditor Address, Auditor Telephone
Number, Signature, and Date.
(xv) Whether the auditee has either a cognizant or oversight agency for audit.
(xvi) The name of the cognizant or oversight agency for audit determined in accordance with
§___.400(a) and §___.400(b), respectively.
(3) Using the information included in the reporting package described in paragraph
(c) of this
section, the auditor shall complete the applicable sections of the form. The auditor shall sign a
statement to be included as part of the data collection form that indicates, at a minimum, the
source of the information included in the form, the auditor's responsibility for the information,
that the form is not a substitute for the reporting package described in paragraph
(c) of this
section, and that the content of the form is limited to the data elements prescribed by OMB.
(c) Reporting package. The reporting package shall include the:
(1) Financial statements and schedule of expenditures of Federal awards discussed in
§___.310(a)
and §___.310(b), respectively;
(2) Summary schedule of prior audit findings discussed in
§___.315(b);
(3) Auditor's report(s) discussed in §___.505; and
(4) Corrective action plan discussed in §___.315(c).
(d) Submission to clearinghouse. All auditees shall submit to the Federal
clearinghouse
designated by OMB the data collection form described in paragraph (b) of this
section and one
copy of the reporting package described in paragraph (c) of this section for:
(1) The Federal clearinghouse to retain as an archival copy; and
(2) Each Federal awarding agency when the schedule of findings and questioned costs
disclosed
audit findings relating to Federal awards that the Federal awarding agency provided directly or
the
summary schedule of prior audit findings reported the status of any audit findings relating to
Federal awards that the Federal awarding agency provided directly.
(e) Additional submission by subrecipients. (1) In addition to the requirements
discussed in
paragraph (d) of this section, auditees that are also subrecipients shall submit
to each pass-through entity one copy of the reporting package described in paragraph
(c) of this section for
each pass-through entity when the schedule of findings and questioned costs disclosed audit
findings relating to Federal awards that the pass-through entity provided or the summary
schedule
of prior audit findings reported the status of any audit findings relating to Federal awards that the
pass-through entity provided.
(2) Instead of submitting the reporting package to a pass-through entity, when a subrecipient
is
not required to submit a reporting package to a pass-through entity pursuant to paragraph
(e)(1)
of this section, the subrecipient shall provide written notification to the pass-through entity that:
an audit of the subrecipient was conducted in accordance with this part (including the period
covered by the audit and the name, amount, and CFDA number of the Federal award(s) provided
by the pass-through entity); the schedule of findings and questioned costs disclosed no audit
findings relating to the Federal award(s) that the pass-through entity provided; and, the summary
schedule of prior audit findings did not report on the status of any audit findings relating to the
Federal award(s) that the pass-through entity provided. A subrecipient may submit a copy of the
reporting package described in paragraph (c) of this section to a pass-through
entity to comply
with this notification requirement.
(f) Requests for report copies. In response to requests by a Federal agency or
pass-through
entity, auditees shall submit the appropriate copies of the reporting package described in
paragraph (c) of this section and, if requested, a copy of any management
letters issued by the
auditor.
(g) Report retention requirements. Auditees shall keep one copy of the data
collection form
described in paragraph (b) of this section and one copy of the reporting
package described in
paragraph (c) of this section on file for three years from the date of submission
to the Federal
clearinghouse designated by OMB. Pass-through entities shall keep subrecipients' submissions
on
file for three years from date of receipt.
(h) Clearinghouse responsibilities. The Federal clearinghouse designated by OMB
shall distribute
the reporting packages received in accordance with paragraph (d)(2) of this
section and
§___.235(c)(3) to applicable Federal awarding agencies, maintain a data
base of completed audits,
provide appropriate information to Federal agencies, and follow up with known auditees which
have not submitted the required data collection forms and reporting packages.
(i) Clearinghouse address. The address of the Federal clearinghouse currently
designated by
OMB is Federal Audit Clearinghouse, Bureau of the Census, 1201 E. 10th Street, Jeffersonville,
IN 47132.
(j) Electronic filing. Nothing in this part shall preclude electronic submissions to
the Federal
clearinghouse in such manner as may be approved by OMB. With OMB approval, the Federal
clearinghouse may pilot test methods of electronic submissions.
(a) Cognizant agency for audit responsibilities. Recipients expending more than $25
million a
year in Federal awards shall have a cognizant agency for audit. The designated cognizant agency
for audit shall be the Federal awarding agency that provides the predominant amount of direct
funding to a recipient unless OMB makes a specific cognizant agency for audit assignment. To
provide for continuity of cognizance, the determination of the predominant amount of direct
funding shall be based upon direct Federal awards expended in the recipient's fiscal years ending
in
1995, 2000, 2005, and every fifth year thereafter. For example, audit cognizance for periods
ending in 1997 through 2000 will be determined based on Federal awards expended in 1995.
(However, for States and local governments that expend more than $25 million a year in Federal
awards and have previously assigned cognizant agencies for audit, the requirements of this
paragraph are not effective until fiscal years beginning after June 30, 2000.) Notwithstanding the
manner in which audit cognizance is determined, a Federal awarding agency with cognizance for
an auditee may reassign cognizance to another Federal awarding agency which provides
substantial direct funding and agrees to be the cognizant agency for audit. Within 30 days after
any reassignment, both the old and the new cognizant agency for audit shall notify the auditee,
and, if known, the auditor of the reassignment. The cognizant agency for audit shall:
(1) Provide technical audit advice and liaison to auditees and auditors.
(2) Consider auditee requests for extensions to the report submission due date required by
§___.320(a). The cognizant agency for audit may grant extensions for
good cause.
(3) Obtain or conduct quality control reviews of selected audits made by non-Federal
auditors,
and provide the results, when appropriate, to other interested organizations.
(4) Promptly inform other affected Federal agencies and appropriate Federal law enforcement
officials of any direct reporting by the auditee or its auditor of irregularities or illegal acts, as
required by GAGAS or laws and regulations.
(5) Advise the auditor and, where appropriate, the auditee of any deficiencies found in the
audits
when the deficiencies require corrective action by the auditor. When advised of deficiencies, the
auditee shall work with the auditor to take corrective action. If corrective action is not taken, the
cognizant agency for audit shall notify the auditor, the auditee, and applicable Federal awarding
agencies and pass-through entities of the facts and make recommendations for follow-up action.
Major inadequacies or repetitive substandard performance by auditors shall be referred to
appropriate State licensing agencies and professional bodies for disciplinary action.
(6) Coordinate, to the extent practical, audits or reviews made by or for Federal agencies that
are
in addition to the audits made pursuant to this part, so that the additional audits or reviews build
upon audits performed in accordance with this part.
(7) Coordinate a management decision for audit findings that affect the Federal programs of
more
than one agency.
(8) Coordinate the audit work and reporting responsibilities among auditors to achieve the
most
cost-effective audit.
(9) For biennial audits permitted under §___.220, consider auditee
requests to qualify as a low-risk auditee under §___.530(a).
(b) Oversight agency for audit responsibilities. An auditee which does not have a
designated
cognizant agency for audit will be under the general oversight of the Federal agency determined
in
accordance with §___.105. The oversight agency for audit:
(1) Shall provide technical advice to auditees and auditors as requested.
(2) May assume all or some of the responsibilities normally performed by a cognizant agency
for
audit.
(c) Federal awarding agency responsibilities. The Federal awarding agency shall
perform the
following for the Federal awards it makes:
(1) Identify Federal awards made by informing each recipient of the CFDA title and number,
award name and number, award year, and if the award is for R&D. When some of this
information is not available, the Federal agency shall provide information necessary to clearly
describe the Federal award.
(2) Advise recipients of requirements imposed on them by Federal laws, regulations, and the
provisions of contracts or grant agreements.
(3) Ensure that audits are completed and reports are received in a timely manner and in
accordance with the requirements of this part.
(4) Provide technical advice and counsel to auditees and auditors as requested.
(5) Issue a management decision on audit findings within six months after receipt of the audit
report and ensure that the recipient takes appropriate and timely corrective action.
(6) Assign a person responsible for providing annual updates of the compliance supplement
to
OMB.
(d) Pass-through entity responsibilities. A pass-through entity shall perform the
following for the
Federal awards it makes:
(1) Identify Federal awards made by informing each subrecipient of CFDA title and number,
award name and number, award year, if the award is R&D, and name of Federal agency.
When
some of this information is not available, the pass-through entity shall provide the best
information
available to describe the Federal award.
(2) Advise subrecipients of requirements imposed on them by Federal laws, regulations, and
the
provisions of contracts or grant agreements as well as any supplemental requirements imposed by
the pass-through entity.
(3) Monitor the activities of subrecipients as necessary to ensure that Federal awards are used
for
authorized purposes in compliance with laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or
grant
agreements and that performance goals are achieved.
(4) Ensure that subrecipients expending $300,000 or more in Federal awards during the
subrecipient's fiscal year have met the audit requirements of this part for that fiscal year.
(5) Issue a management decision on audit findings within six months after receipt of the
subrecipient's audit report and ensure that the subrecipient takes appropriate and timely corrective
action.
(6) Consider whether subrecipient audits necessitate adjustment of the pass-through entity's
own
records.
(7) Require each subrecipient to permit the pass-through entity and auditors to have access to
the
records and financial statements as necessary for the pass-through entity to comply with this part.
§___.405 Management decision.
(a) General. The management decision shall clearly state whether or not the audit
finding is
sustained, the reasons for the decision, and the expected auditee action to repay disallowed costs,
make financial adjustments, or take other action. If the auditee has not completed corrective
action, a timetable for follow-up should be given. Prior to issuing the management decision, the
Federal agency or pass-through entity may request
additional information or documentation from the auditee, including a request for auditor
assurance related to the documentation, as a way of mitigating disallowed costs. The
management decision should describe any appeal process available to the auditee.
(b) Federal agency. As provided in §___.400(a)(7), the
cognizant agency for audit shall be
responsible for coordinating a management decision for audit findings that affect the programs of
more than one Federal agency. As provided in §___.400(c)(5), a
Federal awarding agency is
responsible for issuing a management decision for findings that relate to Federal awards it makes
to recipients. Alternate arrangements may be made on a case-by-case basis by agreement among
the Federal agencies concerned.
(c) Pass-through entity. As provided in §___.400(d)(5), the
pass-through entity shall be
responsible for making the management decision for audit findings that relate to Federal awards
it
makes to subrecipients.
(d) Time requirements. The entity responsible for making the management decision
shall do so
within six months of receipt of the audit report. Corrective action should be initiated within six
months after receipt of the audit report and proceed as rapidly as possible.
(e) Reference numbers. Management decisions shall include the reference numbers
the auditor
assigned to each audit finding in accordance with §___.510(c).
(a) General. The audit shall be conducted in accordance with GAGAS. The audit
shall cover the
entire operations of the auditee; or, at the option of the auditee, such audit shall include a series
of
audits that cover departments, agencies, and other organizational units which expended or
otherwise administered Federal awards during such fiscal year, provided that each such audit
shall
encompass the financial statements and schedule of expenditures of Federal awards for each such
department, agency, and other organizational unit, which shall be considered to be a non-Federal
entity. The financial statements and schedule of expenditures of Federal awards shall be for the
same fiscal year.
(b) Financial statements. The auditor shall determine whether the financial
statements of the
auditee are presented fairly in all material respects in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles. The auditor shall also determine whether the schedule of expenditures of
Federal awards is presented fairly in all material respects in relation to the auditee's financial
statements taken as a whole.
(c) Internal control. (1) In addition to the requirements of GAGAS, the auditor
shall perform
procedures to obtain an understanding of internal control over Federal programs sufficient to plan
the audit to support a low assessed level of control risk for major programs.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(3) of this section, the auditor
shall:
(i) Plan the testing of internal control over major programs to support a low assessed level of
control risk for the assertions relevant to the compliance requirements for each major program;
and
(ii) Perform testing of internal control as planned in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of
this section.
(3) When internal control over some or all of the compliance requirements for a major
program
are likely to be ineffective in preventing or detecting noncompliance, the planning and
performing
of testing described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section are not required for
those compliance
requirements. However, the auditor shall report a reportable condition (including whether any
such condition is a material weakness) in accordance with §___.510,
assess the related control
risk at the maximum, and consider whether additional compliance tests are required because of
ineffective internal control.
(d) Compliance. (1) In addition to the requirements of GAGAS, the auditor shall
determine
whether the auditee has complied with laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant
agreements that may have a direct and material effect on each of its major programs.
(2) The principal compliance requirements applicable to most Federal programs and the
compliance requirements of the largest Federal programs are included in the compliance
supplement.
(3) For the compliance requirements related to Federal programs contained in the compliance
supplement, an audit of these compliance requirements will meet the requirements of this part.
Where there have been changes to the compliance requirements and the changes are not reflected
in the compliance supplement, the auditor shall determine the current compliance requirements
and modify the audit procedures accordingly. For those Federal programs not covered in the
compliance supplement, the auditor should use the types of compliance requirements contained
in
the compliance supplement as guidance for identifying the types of compliance requirements to
test, and determine the requirements governing the Federal program by reviewing the provisions
of contracts and grant agreements and the laws and regulations referred to in such contracts and
grant agreements.
(4) The compliance testing shall include tests of transactions and such other auditing
procedures
necessary to provide the auditor sufficient evidence to support an opinion on compliance.
(e) Audit follow-up. The auditor shall follow-up on prior audit findings, perform
procedures to
assess the reasonableness of the summary schedule of prior audit findings prepared by the auditee
in accordance with §___.315(b), and report, as a current year audit
finding, when the auditor
concludes that the summary schedule of prior audit findings materially misrepresents the status
of
any prior audit finding. The auditor shall perform audit follow-up procedures regardless of
whether a prior audit finding relates to a major program in the current year.
(f) Data Collection Form. As required in §___.320(b)(3),
the auditor shall complete and sign
specified sections of the data collection form.
§___.505 Audit reporting.
The auditor's report(s) may be in the form of either combined or separate reports and may be
organized differently from the manner presented in this section. The auditor's report(s) shall state
that the audit was conducted in accordance with this part and include the following:
(a) An opinion (or disclaimer of opinion) as to whether the financial statements are presented
fairly in all material respects in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles and an
opinion (or disclaimer of opinion) as to whether the schedule of expenditures of Federal awards
is
presented fairly in all material respects in relation to the financial statements taken as a whole.
(b) A report on internal control related to the financial statements and major programs. This
report shall describe the scope of testing of internal control and the results of the tests, and, where
applicable, refer to the separate schedule of findings and questioned costs described in paragraph
(d) of this section.
(c) A report on compliance with laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant
agreements, noncompliance with which could have a material effect on the financial statements.
This report shall also include an opinion (or disclaimer of opinion) as to whether the auditee
complied with laws, regulations, and the provisions of contracts or grant agreements which could
have a direct and material effect on each major program, and, where applicable, refer to the
separate schedule of findings and questioned costs described in paragraph (d)
of this section.
(d) A schedule of findings and questioned costs which shall include the following three
components:
(1) A summary of the auditor's results which shall include:
(i) The type of report the auditor issued on the financial statements of the auditee (i.e.,
unqualified
opinion, qualified opinion, adverse opinion, or disclaimer of opinion);
(ii) Where applicable, a statement that reportable conditions in internal control were
disclosed by
the audit of the financial statements and whether any such conditions were material weaknesses;
(iii) A statement as to whether the audit disclosed any noncompliance which is material to
the
financial statements of the auditee;
(iv) Where applicable, a statement that reportable conditions in internal control over major
programs were disclosed by the audit and whether any such conditions were material
weaknesses;
(v) The type of report the auditor issued on compliance for major programs (i.e., unqualified
opinion, qualified opinion, adverse opinion, or disclaimer of opinion);
(vi) A statement as to whether the audit disclosed any audit findings which the auditor is
required
to report under §___.510(a);
(vii) An identification of major programs;
(viii)The dollar threshold used to distinguish between Type A and Type B programs, as
described
in §___.520(b); and
(ix) A statement as to whether the auditee qualified as a low-risk auditee under
§___.530.
(2) Findings relating to the financial statements which are required to be reported in
accordance
with GAGAS.
(3) Findings and questioned costs for Federal awards which shall include audit findings as
defined
in §___.510(a).
(i) Audit findings (e.g., internal control findings, compliance findings, questioned costs, or
fraud)
which relate to the same issue should be presented as a single audit finding. Where practical,
audit findings should be organized by Federal agency or pass-through entity.
(ii) Audit findings which relate to both the financial statements and Federal awards, as
reported
under paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) of this section,
respectively, should be reported in both
sections of the schedule. However, the reporting in one section of the schedule may be in
summary form with a reference to a detailed reporting in the other section of the schedule.
§___.510 Audit findings.
(a) Audit findings reported. The auditor shall report the following as audit findings
in a schedule
of findings and questioned costs:
(1) Reportable conditions in internal control over major programs. The auditor's
determination of
whether a deficiency in internal control is a reportable condition for the purpose of reporting an
audit finding is in relation to a type of compliance requirement for a major program or an audit
objective identified in the compliance supplement. The auditor shall identify reportable
conditions
which are individually or cumulatively material weaknesses.
(2) Material noncompliance with the provisions of laws, regulations, contracts, or grant
agreements related to a major program. The auditor's determination of whether a noncompliance
with the provisions of laws, regulations, contracts, or grant agreements is material for the purpose
of reporting an audit finding is in relation to a type of compliance requirement for a major
program or an audit objective identified in the compliance supplement.
(3) Known questioned costs which are greater than $10,000 for a type of compliance
requirement
for a major program. Known questioned costs are those specifically identified by the auditor. In
evaluating the effect of questioned costs on the opinion on compliance, the auditor considers the
best estimate of total costs questioned (likely questioned costs), not just the questioned costs
specifically identified (known questioned costs). The auditor shall also report known questioned
costs when likely questioned costs are greater than $10,000 for a type of compliance requirement
for a major program. In reporting questioned costs, the auditor shall include information to
provide proper perspective for judging the prevalence and consequences of the questioned costs.
(4) Known questioned costs which are greater than $10,000 for a Federal program which is
not
audited as a major program. Except for audit follow-up, the auditor is not required under this
part to perform audit procedures for such a Federal program; therefore, the auditor will normally
not find questioned costs for a program which is not audited as a major program. However, if the
auditor does become aware of questioned costs for a Federal program which is not audited as a
major program (e.g., as part of audit follow-up or other audit procedures) and the known
questioned costs are greater than $10,000, then the auditor shall report this as an audit finding.
(5) The circumstances concerning why the auditor's report on compliance for major programs
is
other than an unqualified opinion, unless such circumstances are otherwise reported as audit
findings in the schedule of findings and questioned costs for Federal awards.
(6) Known fraud affecting a Federal award, unless such fraud is otherwise reported as an
audit
finding in the schedule of findings and questioned costs for Federal awards. This paragraph does
not require the auditor to make an additional reporting when the auditor confirms that the fraud
was reported outside of the auditor's reports under the direct reporting requirements of GAGAS.
(7) Instances where the results of audit follow-up procedures disclosed that the summary
schedule
of prior audit findings prepared by the auditee in accordance with
§___.315(b) materially
misrepresents the status of any prior audit finding.
(b) Audit finding detail. Audit findings shall be presented in sufficient detail for the
auditee to
prepare a corrective action plan and take corrective action and for Federal agencies and
pass-through entities to arrive at a management decision. The following specific information
shall be
included, as applicable, in audit findings:
(1) Federal program and specific Federal award identification including the CFDA title and
number, Federal award number and year, name of Federal agency, and name of the applicable
pass-through entity. When information, such as the CFDA title and number or Federal award
number, is not available, the auditor shall provide the best information available to describe the
Federal award.
(2) The criteria or specific requirement upon which the audit finding is based, including
statutory,
regulatory, or other citation.
(3) The condition found, including facts that support the deficiency identified in the audit
finding.
(4) Identification of questioned costs and how they were computed.
(5) Information to provide proper perspective for judging the prevalence and consequences of
the
audit findings, such as whether the audit findings represent an isolated instance or a systemic
problem. Where appropriate, instances identified shall be related to the universe and the number
of cases examined and be quantified in terms of dollar value.
(6) The possible asserted effect to provide sufficient information to the auditee and Federal
agency, or pass-through entity in the case of a subrecipient, to permit them to determine the cause
and effect to facilitate prompt and proper corrective action.
(7) Recommendations to prevent future occurrences of the deficiency identified in the audit
finding.
(8) Views of responsible officials of the auditee when there is disagreement with the audit
findings, to the extent practical.
(c) Reference numbers. Each audit finding in the schedule of findings and
questioned costs shall
include a reference number to allow for easy referencing of the audit findings during follow-up.
§___.515 Audit working papers.
(a) Retention of working papers. The auditor shall retain working papers and
reports for a
minimum of three years after the date of issuance of the auditor's report(s) to the auditee, unless
the auditor is notified in writing by the cognizant agency for audit, oversight agency for audit, or
pass-through entity to extend the retention period. When the auditor is aware that the Federal
awarding agency, pass-through entity, or auditee is contesting an audit finding, the auditor shall
contact the parties contesting the audit finding for guidance prior to destruction of the working
papers and reports.
(b) Access to working papers. Audit working papers shall be made available upon
request to the
cognizant or oversight agency for audit or its designee, a Federal agency providing direct or
indirect funding, or GAO at the completion of the audit, as part of a quality review, to resolve
audit findings, or to carry out oversight responsibilities consistent with the purposes of this part.
Access to working papers includes the right of Federal agencies to obtain copies of working
papers, as is reasonable and necessary.
§___.520 Major program determination.
(a) General. The auditor shall use a risk-based approach to determine which Federal
programs
are major programs. This risk-based approach shall include consideration of: Current and prior
audit experience, oversight by Federal agencies and pass-through entities, and the inherent risk of
the Federal program. The process in paragraphs (b) through
(i) of this section shall be followed.
(b) Step 1. (1) The auditor shall identify the larger Federal programs, which shall
be labeled
Type A programs. Type A programs are defined as Federal programs with Federal awards
expended during the audit period exceeding the larger of:
(i) $300,000 or three percent (.03) of total Federal awards expended in the case of an auditee
for
which total Federal awards expended equal or exceed $300,000 but are less than or equal to $100
million.
(ii) $3 million or three-tenths of one percent (.003) of total Federal awards expended in the
case
of an auditee for which total Federal awards expended exceed $100 million but are less than or
equal to $10 billion.
(iii) $30 million or 15 hundredths of one percent (.0015) of total Federal awards expended in
the
case of an auditee for which total Federal awards expended exceed $10 billion.
(2) Federal programs not labeled Type A under paragraph (b)(1) of this
section shall be labeled
Type B programs.
(3) The inclusion of large loan and loan guarantees (loans) should not result in the exclusion
of
other programs as Type A programs. When a Federal program providing loans significantly
affects the number or size of Type A programs, the auditor shall consider this Federal program as
a Type A program and exclude its values in determining other Type A programs.
(4) For biennial audits permitted under §___.220, the determination
of Type A and Type B
programs shall be based upon the Federal awards expended during the two-year period.
(c) Step 2. (1) The auditor shall identify Type A programs which are low-risk. For
a Type A
program to be considered low-risk, it shall have been audited as a major program in at least one
of
the two most recent audit periods (in the most recent audit period in the case of a biennial audit),
and, in the most recent audit period, it shall have had no audit findings under
§___.510(a).
However, the auditor may use judgment and consider that audit findings from questioned costs
under §___.510(a)(3) and §___.510(a)(4),
fraud under §___.510(a)(6), and audit follow-up for
the summary schedule of prior audit findings under §___.510(a)(7) do
not preclude the Type A
program from being low-risk. The auditor shall consider: the criteria in
§___.525(c),
§___.525(d)(1), §___.525(d)(2), and
§___.525(d)(3); the results of audit follow-up; whether any
changes in personnel or systems affecting a Type A program have significantly increased risk;
and
apply professional judgment in determining whether a Type A program is low-risk.
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (c)(1) of this section, OMB may approve a
Federal awarding
agency's request that a Type A program at certain recipients may not be considered low-risk. For
example, it may be necessary for a large Type A program to be audited as major each year at
particular recipients to allow the Federal agency to comply with the Government Management
Reform Act of 1994 (31 U.S.C. 3515). The Federal agency shall notify the recipient and, if
known, the auditor at least 180 days prior to the end of the fiscal year to be audited of OMB's
approval.
(d) Step 3. (1) The auditor shall identify Type B programs which are high-risk
using professional
judgment and the criteria in §___.525. However, should the auditor
select Option 2 under Step 4
(paragraph (e)(2)(i)(B) of this section), the auditor is not required to identify
more high-risk Type
B programs than the number of low-risk Type A programs. Except for known reportable
conditions in internal control or compliance problems as discussed in
§___.525(b)(1),
§___.525(b)(2), and §___.525(c)(1), a single
criteria in §___.525 would seldom cause a Type B
program to be considered high-risk.
(2) The auditor is not expected to perform risk assessments on relatively small Federal
programs.
Therefore, the auditor is only required to perform risk assessments on Type B programs that
exceed the larger of:
(i) $100,000 or three-tenths of one percent (.003) of total Federal awards expended when the
auditee has less than or equal to $100 million in total Federal awards expended.
(ii) $300,000 or three-hundredths of one percent (.0003) of total Federal awards expended
when
the auditee has more than $100 million in total Federal awards expended.
(e) Step 4. At a minimum, the auditor shall audit all of the following as major
programs:
(1) All Type A programs, except the auditor may exclude any Type A programs identified as
low-risk under Step 2 (paragraph (c)(1) of this section).
(2) (i) High-risk Type B programs as identified under either of the following two options:
(A) Option 1. At least one half of the Type B programs identified as high-risk
under Step 3
(paragraph (d) of this section), except this paragraph
(e)(2)(i)(A) does not require the auditor to
audit more high-risk Type B programs than the number of low-risk Type A programs identified
as
low-risk under Step 2.
(B) Option 2. One high-risk Type B program for each Type A program identified
as low-risk
under Step 2.
(ii) When identifying which high-risk Type B programs to audit as major under either Option
1 or
2 in paragraph (e)(2)(i)(A) or (B), the auditor is encouraged
to use an approach which provides
an opportunity for different high-risk Type B programs to be audited as major over a period of
time.
(3) Such additional programs as may be necessary to comply with the percentage of coverage
rule
discussed in paragraph (f) of this section. This paragraph
(e)(3) may require the auditor to audit
more programs as major than the number of Type A programs.
(f) Percentage of coverage rule. The auditor shall audit as major programs Federal
programs with
Federal awards expended that, in the aggregate, encompass at least 50 percent of total Federal
awards expended. If the auditee meets the criteria in §___.530 for a
low-risk auditee, the auditor
need only audit as major programs Federal programs with Federal awards expended that, in the
aggregate, encompass at least 25 percent of total Federal awards expended.
(g) Documentation of risk. The auditor shall document in the working papers the
risk analysis
process used in determining major programs.
(h) Auditor's judgment. When the major program determination was performed and
documented
in accordance with this part, the auditor's judgment in applying the risk-based approach to
determine major programs shall be presumed correct. Challenges by Federal agencies and
pass-through entities shall only be for clearly improper use of the guidance in this part.
However,
Federal agencies and pass-through entities may provide auditors guidance about the risk of a
particular Federal program and the auditor shall consider this guidance in determining major
programs in audits not yet completed.
(i) Deviation from use of risk criteria. For first-year audits, the auditor may elect to
determine
major programs as all Type A programs plus any Type B programs as necessary to meet the
percentage of coverage rule discussed in paragraph (f) of this section. Under
this option, the
auditor would not be required to perform the procedures discussed in paragraphs
(c), (d), and (e)
of this section.
(1) A first-year audit is the first year the entity is audited under this part or the first year of a
change of auditors.
(2) To ensure that a frequent change of auditors would not preclude audit of high-risk Type B
programs, this election for first-year audits may not be used by an auditee more than once in
every
three years.
§___.525 Criteria for Federal program risk.
(a) General. The auditor's determination should be based on an overall evaluation of
the risk of
noncompliance occurring which could be material to the Federal program. The auditor shall use
auditor judgment and consider criteria, such as described in paragraphs (b),
(c), and (d) of this
section, to identify risk in Federal programs. Also, as part of the risk analysis, the auditor may
wish to discuss a particular Federal program with auditee management and the Federal agency or
pass-through entity.
(b) Current and prior audit experience. (1) Weaknesses in internal control over
Federal programs
would indicate higher risk. Consideration should be given to the control environment over
Federal programs and such factors as the expectation of management's adherence to applicable
laws and regulations and the provisions of contracts and grant agreements and the competence
and experience of personnel who administer the Federal programs.
(i) A Federal program administered under multiple internal control structures may have
higher
risk. When assessing risk in a large single audit, the auditor shall consider whether weaknesses
are isolated in a single operating unit (e.g., one college campus) or pervasive throughout the
entity.
(ii) When significant parts of a Federal program are passed through to subrecipients, a weak
system for monitoring subrecipients would indicate higher risk.
(iii) The extent to which computer processing is used to administer Federal programs, as well
as
the complexity of that processing, should be considered by the auditor in assessing risk. New
and
recently modified computer systems may also indicate risk.
(2) Prior audit findings would indicate higher risk, particularly when the situations identified
in the
audit findings could have a significant impact on a Federal program or have not been corrected.
(3) Federal programs not recently audited as major programs may be of higher risk than
Federal
programs recently audited as major programs without audit findings.
(c) Oversight exercised by Federal agencies and pass-through entities. (1)
Oversight exercised by
Federal agencies or pass-through entities could indicate risk. For example, recent monitoring or
other reviews performed by an oversight entity which disclosed no significant problems would
indicate lower risk. However, monitoring which disclosed significant problems would indicate
higher risk.
(2) Federal agencies, with the concurrence of OMB, may identify Federal programs which
are
higher risk. OMB plans to provide this identification in the compliance supplement.
(d) Inherent risk of the Federal program. (1) The nature of a Federal program may
indicate risk.
Consideration should be given to the complexity of the program and the extent to which the
Federal program contracts for goods and services. For example, Federal programs that disburse
funds through third party contracts or have eligibility criteria may be of higher risk. Federal
programs primarily involving staff payroll costs may have a high-risk for time and effort
reporting,
but otherwise be at low-risk.
(2) The phase of a Federal program in its life cycle at the Federal agency may indicate risk.
For
example, a new Federal program with new or interim regulations may have higher risk than an
established program with time-tested regulations. Also, significant changes in Federal programs,
laws, regulations, or the provisions of contracts or grant agreements may increase risk.
(3) The phase of a Federal program in its life cycle at the auditee may indicate risk. For
example,
during the first and last years that an auditee participates in a Federal program, the risk may be
higher due to start-up or closeout of program activities and staff.
(4) Type B programs with larger Federal awards expended would be of higher risk than
programs
with substantially smaller Federal awards expended.
§___.530 Criteria for a low-risk auditee.
An auditee which meets all of the following conditions for each of the preceding two years
(or, in
the case of biennial audits, preceding two audit periods) shall qualify as a low-risk auditee and be
eligible for reduced audit coverage in accordance with §___.520:
(a) Single audits were performed on an annual basis in accordance with the provisions of this
part.
A non-Federal entity that has biennial audits does not qualify as a low-risk auditee, unless agreed
to in advance by the cognizant or oversight agency for audit.
(b) The auditor's opinions on the financial statements and the schedule of expenditures of
Federal
awards were unqualified. However, the cognizant or oversight agency for audit may judge that
an
opinion qualification does not affect the management of Federal awards and provide a waiver.
(c) There were no deficiencies in internal control which were identified as material
weaknesses
under the requirements of GAGAS. However, the cognizant or oversight agency for audit may
judge that any identified material weaknesses do not affect the management of Federal awards
and
provide a waiver.
(d) None of the Federal programs had audit findings from any of the following in either of
the
preceding two years (or, in the case of biennial audits, preceding two audit periods) in which they
were classified as Type A programs:
(1) Internal control deficiencies which were identified as material weaknesses;
(2) Noncompliance with the provisions of laws, regulations, contracts, or grant agreements
which
have a material effect on the Type A program; or(3) Known or likely questioned costs that
exceed
five percent of the total Federal awards expended for a Type A program during the year.
Appendix A to Part __ - Data Collection Form (Form SF-SAC) (56KB)
Appendix B to Part __ - Circular A-133 Compliance Supplement
Note: Provisional OMB Circular A-133 Compliance Supplement is available from the
Office of
Administration, Publications Office, room 2200, New Executive Office Building, Washington,
DC
20503.