THE
STATE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT / THE UNIVERSITY
OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK / ALBANY, NY 12234 |
TO: |
EMSC-VESID Committee |
FROM: |
Jean C. Stevens |
SUBJECT: |
Proposed
Amendment to Commissioner’s Regulations Relating to School District and
BOCES Financial Accountability |
DATE: |
May 16,
2006 |
STRATEGIC
GOAL: |
Goals 2
and 5 |
AUTHORIZATION(S): |
|
Issue for
Decision
Should the Board of Regents adopt the proposed promulgation of section 170.12 and proposed amendment of sections 170.2 and 170.3, relating to school district and BOCES financial accountability, to conform the Commissioner’s Regulations to Chapter 263 of the Laws of 2005?
Required by
State statute.
Proposed
Handling
The proposed rule will come before the Regents EMSC-VESID Committee in May for adoption as a permanent rule. The proposed rule was adopted as an emergency measure at the February Regents meeting. A second emergency adoption is also necessary at the May meeting to ensure that the February emergency rule remains continuously in effect until the effective date of its adoption as a permanent rule. A statement of the facts and circumstances which necessitate emergency action is attached.
Procedural
History
The proposed rule was discussed by the
Committee at its February meeting and adopted as an emergency measure, effective
February 28, 2006.
Background
Information
The proposed rule is needed to implement Chapter 263 of the Laws of 2005 and will assist school districts and BOCES in establishing systems and processes to improve fiscal accountability. The proposed rule (1) requires trustees or members of a board of education of a school district or BOCES to complete a minimum of six hours of training on the financial oversight, accountability, and fiduciary responsibilities of a board member within the first year of their term and that the Commissioner approve all providers and curriculums for such training; (2) requires school districts and BOCES to establish an internal audit function no later than July 1, 2006, to be in operation no later than December 31, 2006; (3) specifies the qualifications and duties for a claims auditor position and the individual or organizations that can be appointed to that position; (4) specifies the requirements for the establishment of an audit committee and the duties and responsibilities for such a committee; and (5) requires school districts to utilize a competitive request for proposal process when contracting for their annual audit, and to prepare a corrective action plan in response to certain findings.
Supporting materials for the proposed rule are available upon request from the Secretary to the Board of Regents. A Notice of Emergency Adoption and Proposed Rule Making was published in the State Register on March 15, 2006. An Assessment of Public Comment is attached. After adoption of the emergency rule, Chapter 58 of the Laws of 2006 amended Education Law section 2116-a(3)(a) to change the date for filing with the Commissioner of a school district's or BOCES' annual audit report from October 30th to October 15th. A nonsubstantial change was made to section 170.12(e)(2) of the proposed rule to conform to the statutory change.
Recommendation
VOTED: That section 170.12 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education be added, and that subdivisions (d) and (r) of section 170.2 and subdivision (a) of section 170.3 be amended, as submitted, effective June 15, 2006, and
VOTED:
That section 170.12 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education
be added, and that subdivisions (d) and (r) of section 170.2 and subdivision (a)
of section 170.3 be amended, as submitted, effective May 29, 2006, as an
emergency action upon a finding by the Board of Regents that such action is
necessary for the preservation of the general welfare in order to ensure that
the emergency rule adopted at the February Regents meeting remains continuously
in effect until the effective date of its adoption as a permanent rule.
Timetable for
Implementation
The proposed amendment will become effective as a permanent rule on June 15, 2006.
Attachment
AMENDMENT OF THE REGULATIONS OF THE
COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION
Pursuant to Education Law sections 207, 305,
1604, 1709, 1711, 1950, 2102-a, 2116-a, 2116-b, 2116-c, 2503, 2508, 2509, 2523,
2524, 2525, 2526, 2527, 2554, 2562, 2566, 2573, 2576, 2580 and 3713, and Chapter
263 of the Laws of 2005
1.
Section 170.12 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education is
added, effective June 15, 2006, as follows:
170.12
School District Financial
Accountability.
(a)
Training for school district and board of cooperative educational
services (BOCES) board members.
Except as provided in paragraph (3) of this subdivision, every trustee or
voting member of a board of education of a school district or a BOCES, elected
or appointed for a term beginning on or after July 1, 2005, shall, within the
first year of his or her term, complete a minimum of six hours of training from
a provider approved pursuant to paragraph (1) of this subdivision, on the
financial oversight, accountability, and fiduciary responsibilities of a board
member. For purposes of this
subdivision "board member" shall mean a trustee, a member of a board of
education, or a member of a BOCES.
The required training may be provided in one session or in partial
increments.
(1)
Approved providers and curriculum.
(i)
Eligibility. Training may be
provided by the State Education Department, the Office of the State Comptroller,
or other provider that has been approved by the Commissioner of Education
pursuant to this paragraph.
(ii)
Application. A provider
seeking the Commissioner's approval to offer training shall submit an
application to the New York State Education Department in a format and pursuant
to a timeframe as prescribed by the Commissioner. The application shall state the
objective(s) of the training and include the resumes of any
trainers.
(iii)
Approval.
(a)
In approving a training provider, the Commissioner of Education shall
consider the applicant’s understanding of the educational environment;
understanding of the roles of trustees, boards of education and BOCES; and the
experience of the applicant in delivering such
training.
(b)
The training curriculum shall be approved by the Commissioner in
consultation with the State Comptroller and shall address, at a minimum, the
provisions and context of Education Law section 2102-a requiring such training;
roles and responsibilities of board members including internal auditors and the
audit committee; overview of internal controls and risk assessment; internal and
external audits; revenue sources and the budget process; monitoring financial
condition and maintaining school district fiscal health; and preventing fraud,
waste and abuse of district resources.
(2)
Certificate of completion.
(i)
An approved provider shall give each participant who successfully
completes all or part of the required six hours of training specified in this
subdivision a certificate of completion
showing:
(a) the name of the participant;
(b)
the name of the provider of the training;
(c)
the date and location of the training;
(d) the content and number of hours of such
training; and
(e)
a statement that the training qualifies as all or part of the required
six hours of training for board members.
(ii)
Each trustee or board member shall demonstrate compliance with the
training requirement prescribed in this subdivision by filing with the district
clerk a copy of his or her certificate(s) of
completion.
(3)
Applicability.
(i)
Upon demonstration of compliance with the training requirements of this
subdivision, no trustee or board member shall be required to repeat such
training.
(ii)
Nothing in this subdivision shall be deemed to require a member of a
central high school district board or a member of a BOCES to complete the
required training if such member has already completed such requirement as a
member of a board of a component school
district.
(iii)
The provisions of this subdivision shall not apply to the City School
District of the City of New York, provided that the Chancellor of such school
district shall annually certify to the Commissioner that the district has a
training program that meets or exceeds the requirements of this
subdivision.
(iv)
A trustee or member of a board of education or BOCES shall be deemed to
have met the training requirement of this subdivision if such person can provide
sufficient documentation to establish that such person has completed, on or
after July 1, 2004 and prior to February 28, 2006, a training program
substantially equivalent to an approved curriculum by an approved provider. Any such request and the supporting
documentation shall be sent to the State Education Department for
approval.
(b)
Internal Audit Function.
Except as provided in paragraphs (3) and (4) of this subdivision, each
school district and board of cooperative educational services (BOCES) shall
establish, not later than July 1, 2006, an internal audit function to be in
operation no later than December 31, 2006.
(1)
Such function shall include, at a
minimum:
(i)
development of a risk assessment of district operations, including but
not limited to, a review of financial policies, procedures and
practices;
(ii)
an annual review and update of such risk assessment;
(iii)
annual testing and evaluation of one or more areas of the district’s
internal controls, taking into account risk, control weaknesses, size, and
complexity of operations.
(iv) preparation of reports, at least annually or more frequently as the trustees or board may direct, which analyze significant risk assessment findings, recommend changes for strengthening controls and reducing identified risks, and specify timeframes for implementation of such recommendations.
(2)
Conduct of internal audit function.
(i)
Personnel or entities conducting internal audits, reviews, or risk
assessments shall, for purposes of this section, be referred to as the internal
auditor and shall:
(a)
follow generally accepted auditing
standards;
(b)
be independent of district or BOCES business operations;
and
(c) have
the requisite knowledge and skills to complete the
work.
(ii)
A district or BOCES may use its employee(s), inter-municipal cooperative
agreements, shared services to the extent authorized by Education Law section
1950, or independent contractor(s) to fulfill the internal audit function,
provided that personnel or entities performing the function meet professional
auditing standards for independence between the auditor and the district and
comply with the applicable provisions of this
subdivision.
(iii)
The results of the work of the internal audit function shall be reported
directly to the board.
(iv) A
school district or BOCES with an internal audit function that meets or exceeds
the requirements of this subdivision shall not be required to replace or modify
its existing internal audit function.
(3)
Exemption.
(i)
The following school districts shall be exempt from the requirements of
this subdivision:
(a)
districts employing fewer than eight
teachers;
(b) districts with actual general fund
expenditures totaling less than five million dollars in the previous school
year; or
(c)
districts with actual enrollment of less than three hundred students in
the previous school year.
(ii)
Any school district claiming such exemption shall annually certify to the
Commissioner that such school district meets the requirements set forth in
subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.
(4)
Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed as requiring a school
district in any city with a population of 125,000 or more to replace or modify
an existing internal audit function where such function already exists by
special or local law, so long as the superintendent of the district annually
certifies to the Commissioner that the existing internal audit function meets or
exceeds the requirements of Education Law section
2116-b.
(c)
Office of Claims Auditor.
The trustees, board of education of a school district or BOCES may
establish the office of claims auditor and appoint a claims auditor who shall
hold his or her position subject to the pleasure of such trustees or
board.
(1)
Qualifications.
(i)
The individual appointed as the claims auditor shall have the necessary
knowledge and skills to effectively audit the claims. The claims auditor shall have experience
with purchasing, bidding and claims, and shall be bonded as the trustees or
board shall require pursuant to section 170.2(d) of this
Part.
(ii)
A claims auditor shall not be required to be a resident of the school
district or BOCES supervisory district.
(iii)
No person shall be eligible for appointment to the office of claims
auditor who shall also be:
(a)
a trustee of the school district or member of the board of education or
BOCES;
(b)
the clerk or treasurer of
the school district, board of education or BOCES;
(c)
the superintendent of schools or other official of the school district or
BOCES responsible for business
management;
(d)
the person designated as purchasing agent for the school district or
BOCES;
(e)
clerical or professional personnel directly involved in accounting and
purchasing functions of the school district or BOCES or under the direct
supervision of the superintendent of schools or district superintendent;
(f)
the individual or entity responsible for the internal audit function
pursuant to subdivision (b) of this
section;
(g)
the independent auditor responsible for the annual external audit of the
financial statements; or
(h) a
close or immediate family member of an employee, officer, or contractor providing services to the district. For purposes of this subparagraph, a
"close family member" shall be defined as a parent, sibling or nondependent
child, and an "immediate family member" shall be defined as a spouse, spouse
equivalent, or dependent (whether or not
related).
(2)
Duties.
(i)
If the trustees, board of education or BOCES appoints a claims auditor to
audit and approve each claim, the claims auditor shall report directly to the
trustees or board on the result of the audits of claims, and shall report, as
determined by the trustees or board of education, to the clerk of the school
district or board of education or to the superintendent of schools, for
administrative matters such as workspace, time and
attendance.
(ii) The
claims auditor shall certify that each claim listed on the warrant was audited
and payment was authorized.
(3)
Delegation. The trustees,
board of education or BOCES may delegate the auditing of claims to an individual
through the use of:
(i) a school district or BOCES employee who
is not prohibited from being the claims
auditor;
(ii) an inter-municipal cooperative
agreement;
(iii) shared services to the extent
authorized by Education Law section 1950; or
(iv) independent contractors, provided that
the individual or organization serving as independent contractor meets the
standards for independence between the auditor and the district as set forth in
this subparagraph. For purposes of
this subparagraph, an individual or organization shall be considered independent
if such individual or organization:
(a) has no other responsibilities related to
the business operations of the school district or BOCES, as applicable;
(b) has no interest in any other contracts
with, and does not provide any goods or services to, the school district or
BOCES; and
(c) is not a close or an immediate family
member of anyone who has responsibilities related to business operations of the
school district or BOCES, or has an interest in any other contracts with the
school district or BOCES. For
purposes of this subparagraph, a "close family member" shall be defined as a
parent, sibling or nondependent child, and an "immediate family member" shall be
defined as a spouse, spouse equivalent, or dependent (whether or not
related).
(d)
Audit committees.
(1)
Establishment.
(i)
Except as provided in paragraph (3) of this subdivision, every school
district and board of cooperative educational services (BOCES) shall establish
by a resolution of the trustees or board an audit committee pursuant to
Education Law section 2116-c and the requirements of this subdivision. The audit committee shall consist of at
least three members, who shall serve without compensation, but who shall be
reimbursed for any actual and necessary expenditures incurred in relation to
attendance at meetings.
(ii) The
audit committee shall be established no later than January 1, 2006 as
either:
(a) a
committee of the trustees or board members;
(b) as a
committee of the whole; or
(c) an
advisory committee, which may include or be composed entirely of persons other
than trustees or members of the board if, in the opinion of the trustees or
board, such membership is advisable to provide accounting and auditing
experience. Persons other than
trustees or board members who serve on an advisory committee shall be
independent and shall not:
(1) be
employed by the district;
(2) be
an individual who within the last two years provided or currently provides
services or goods or services to the district;
(3) be
the owner of or have a direct and material interest in a company providing goods
or services to the district; or
(4) be a
close or immediate family member of an employee, officer, or contractor providing services to the district. For purposes of this subparagraph, a
"close family member" shall be defined as a parent, sibling or nondependent
child, and an "immediate family member" shall be defined as a spouse, spouse
equivalent, or dependent (whether or not
related).
(iii)
The members of the audit committee should collectively possess knowledge
in accounting, auditing, financial reporting, and school district
finances.
(iv) A member of an audit committee shall not be required to be a resident of the school district or BOCES supervisory district.
(2)
Duties and responsibilities.
The role of an audit committee shall be advisory and any recommendations
it provides to the trustees or board pursuant to this paragraph shall not
substitute for any required review and acceptance by the trustees or
board.
(i) It
shall be the responsibility of an audit committee
to:
(a)
provide recommendations regarding the appointment of the external auditor
for the district;
(b) meet
with the external auditor prior to commencement of the
audit;
(c)
review and discuss with the external auditor any risk assessment of the
district's fiscal operations developed as part of the auditor's responsibilities
under governmental auditing standards for a financial statement audit and
federal single audit standards if applicable;
(d)
receive and review the draft annual audit report and accompanying draft
management letter and, working directly with the external auditor, assist the
trustees or board in interpreting such documents;
(e) make
a recommendation to the trustees or board on accepting the annual audit
report;
(f)
review every corrective action plan developed by a district as required
under Education Law section 2116-a and assist the trustees or board in the
implementation of such plan; and
(g)
assist in the oversight of the internal audit function required by
Education Law section 2116-b, including, but not limited to, providing
recommendations regarding the appointment of the internal auditor for the
district, the review of significant findings and recommendations of the internal
auditor, monitoring of the district's implementation of such recommendations,
and participate in the evaluation of the performance of the internal audit
function.
(ii) The
audit committee shall develop, and submit to the trustees or board for approval,
a formal, written charter which shall include, but not be limited to, provisions
regarding the committee’s purpose, mission, duties, responsibilities and
membership requirements, consistent with the provisions of this
subdivision.
(iii)
The audit committee shall hold regularly-scheduled meetings and report to
the board on the activities of the audit committee on an as needed basis, but
not less than annually. The report
shall address or include, at a minimum:
(a) the activities of the audit
committee;
(b) a summary of the minutes of the
meetings;
(c) significant findings brought to the
attention of the audit committee;
(d) any indications of suspected fraud,
waste, or abuse;
(e) significant internal control findings;
and
(f)
activities of the internal audit
function.
(iv) The
audit committee may conduct an executive session pertaining to any matter set
forth in section 105 of the Public Officers Law or in paragraphs (2)(i)(b)
through (2)(i)(d) of this subdivision.
Any trustee or member of the board of education who is not a member of
such audit committee may be allowed to attend an executive session of an audit
committee meeting if authorized by a resolution of the trustees or board of
education.
(3) The
provisions of this subdivision shall not apply:
(i)
to a school district employing fewer than eight teachers;
or
(ii)
to the City School District of the City of New York, provided that the
Chancellor of such school district shall annually certify to the Commissioner
that such district has a process for review by an audit committee of the
district's annual audit that meets or exceeds the requirements of this
subdivision.
(e)
Annual audit.
(1)
Each school district, except those employing fewer than eight teachers,
and each BOCES shall obtain, in a form prescribed by the Commissioner, an annual
audit of its records by an independent certified public accountant or an
independent public accountant in accordance with the provisions of Education Law
section 2116-a(3) and the provisions of this subdivision. The board of education of the City
School District of the City of New York and community districts of such city
school district shall obtain an annual audit by the comptroller of the City of
New York, or by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with
the provisions of Education Law section 2116-a(3) and the provisions of this
subdivision.
(2) The
independent accountant shall present the report of the annual audit to the
trustees or board and provide a copy of the audit to each trustee or board
member. The trustees or board shall
adopt a resolution accepting the audit report and shall file a copy of the
resolution with the Commissioner. A
school district or BOCES shall file with the Commissioner its audit report for a
specific school year by October 15th of the following school year; provided that
the city school districts of the cities of Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse and
Yonkers, and the City School District of the City of New York and community
districts of such city school district, shall file their audit reports with the
Commissioner by January 1st of such following school
year.
(3)
Request for proposal process.
On or after July 1, 2005, all school districts, except the City School
District of the City of New York, and each BOCES shall utilize a competitive
request for proposal process when contracting for its annual audit. In addition, on or after July 1, 2005,
and applicable to all school districts and BOCES, no audit engagement shall be
for a term longer than five consecutive years, provided that nothing in this
subdivision shall preclude a school district or BOCES, in its discretion, from
permitting an independent certified public accountant or an independent public
accountant engaged under an existing contract for such services to submit a
proposal for such services in response to a request for competitive proposals,
or be awarded a contract to provide such services under a request for proposal
process. School
district or BOCES procurement policies and procedures adopted pursuant to
General Municipal Law section 104-b shall be amended, if necessary, to be
consistent with this requirement.
(4) Corrective action plan.
(i)
Within ninety days of receipt of such report or management letter, each
school district superintendent and BOCES district superintendent shall prepare a
corrective action plan, approved by the board, in response to any findings
contained in:
(a)
the annual external audit report or management letter;
(b)
a final audit report issued by the district's internal auditor;
(c)
a final audit report issued by the State
Comptroller;
(d)
a final audit report issued by the State Education Department;
or
(e)
a final audit report issued by the United States or an office, agency or
department thereof.
(ii)
The corrective action plan shall include expected date(s) of
implementation, where appropriate.
A school district or BOCES shall, to the extent practicable, begin
implementation of its corrective action plan no later than the end of the next
fiscal year.
(iii)
Each school district and BOCES shall file its corrective action plan with
the State Education Department.
2.
Subdivision (d) of section 170.2 of the Regulations of the Commissioner
of Education is amended, effective June 15, 2006, as
follows:
(d)
to establish the limits of and require the filing of an official
undertaking, with corporate surety, by the collector, treasurer, and [auditor]
claims auditor if [one is] appointed or, in lieu thereof, to establish
limits for and to include such officers in a blanket undertaking, in accordance
with the provisions of subdivision 2 of section 11 of the Public Officers
Law;
3.
Subdivision (r) of section 170.2 of the Regulations of the Commissioner
of Education is amended, effective June 15, 2006, as
follows:
(r)
to require, in districts with eight or more teachers, an annual audit
pursuant to section 170.12(e) of this Part [, in a form prescribed by the
Commissioner of Education, of all funds by a certified public accountant or by a
public accountant. Each board shall
adopt a resolution accepting the audit report and shall file a copy of the
resolution and report with the Commissioner of Education by October
first].
4.
Subdivision (a) of section 170.3 of the Regulations of the Commissioner
of Education is amended, effective June 15, 2006, as
follows:
(a) Each board of cooperative educational services shall have power and it shall be its duty to secure an annual audit pursuant to section 170.12(e) of this Part [, in a form prescribed by the Commissioner of Education, of all funds by a certified public accountant or by a public accountant. Each board shall adopt a resolution accepting the audit report and shall file a copy of the resolution and the report with the Commissioner of Education by October 1st].
AMENDMENT OF THE REGULATIONS OF THE
COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION
Pursuant to Education Law sections 207, 305,
1604, 1709, 1711, 1950, 2102-a, 2116-a, 2116-b, 2116-c, 2503, 2508, 2509, 2523,
2524, 2525, 2526, 2527, 2554, 2562, 2566, 2573, 2576, 2580 and 3713, and Chapter
263 of the Laws of 2005
1.
Section 170.12 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education is
added, effective May 29, 2006, as follows:
170.12
School District Financial
Accountability.
(a)
Training for school district and board of cooperative educational
services (BOCES) board members.
Except as provided in paragraph (3) of this subdivision, every trustee or
voting member of a board of education of a school district or a BOCES, elected
or appointed for a term beginning on or after July 1, 2005, shall, within the
first year of his or her term, complete a minimum of six hours of training from
a provider approved pursuant to paragraph (1) of this subdivision, on the
financial oversight, accountability, and fiduciary responsibilities of a board
member. For purposes of this
subdivision "board member" shall mean a trustee, a member of a board of
education, or a member of a BOCES.
The required training may be provided in one session or in partial
increments.
(1)
Approved providers and curriculum.
(i)
Eligibility. Training may be
provided by the State Education Department, the Office of the State Comptroller,
or other provider that has been approved by the Commissioner of Education
pursuant to this paragraph.
(ii)
Application. A provider
seeking the Commissioner's approval to offer training shall submit an
application to the New York State Education Department in a format and pursuant
to a timeframe as prescribed by the Commissioner. The application shall state the
objective(s) of the training and include the resumes of any
trainers.
(iii)
Approval.
(a)
In approving a training provider, the Commissioner of Education shall
consider the applicant’s understanding of the educational environment;
understanding of the roles of trustees, boards of education and BOCES; and the
experience of the applicant in delivering such
training.
(b)
The training curriculum shall be approved by the Commissioner in
consultation with the State Comptroller and shall address, at a minimum, the
provisions and context of Education Law section 2102-a requiring such training;
roles and responsibilities of board members including internal auditors and the
audit committee; overview of internal controls and risk assessment; internal and
external audits; revenue sources and the budget process; monitoring financial
condition and maintaining school district fiscal health; and preventing fraud,
waste and abuse of district resources.
(2)
Certificate of completion.
(i)
An approved provider shall give each participant who successfully
completes all or part of the required six hours of training specified in this
subdivision a certificate of completion
showing:
(a) the name of the participant;
(b)
the name of the provider of the training;
(c)
the date and location of the training;
(d) the content and number of hours of such
training; and
(e)
a statement that the training qualifies as all or part of the required
six hours of training for board members.
(ii)
Each trustee or board member shall demonstrate compliance with the
training requirement prescribed in this subdivision by filing with the district
clerk a copy of his or her certificate(s) of
completion.
(3)
Applicability.
(i)
Upon demonstration of compliance with the training requirements of this
subdivision, no trustee or board member shall be required to repeat such
training.
(ii)
Nothing in this subdivision shall be deemed to require a member of a
central high school district board or a member of a BOCES to complete the
required training if such member has already completed such requirement as a
member of a board of a component school
district.
(iii)
The provisions of this subdivision shall not apply to the City School
District of the City of New York, provided that the Chancellor of such school
district shall annually certify to the Commissioner that the district has a
training program that meets or exceeds the requirements of this
subdivision.
(iv)
A trustee or member of a board of education or BOCES shall be deemed to
have met the training requirement of this subdivision if such person can provide
sufficient documentation to establish that such person has completed, on or
after July 1, 2004 and prior to February 28, 2006, a training program
substantially equivalent to an approved curriculum by an approved provider. Any such request and the supporting
documentation shall be sent to the State Education Department for
approval.
(b)
Internal Audit Function.
Except as provided in paragraphs (3) and (4) of this subdivision, each
school district and board of cooperative educational services (BOCES) shall
establish, not later than July 1, 2006, an internal audit function to be in
operation no later than December 31, 2006.
(1)
Such function shall include, at a
minimum:
(i)
development of a risk assessment of district operations, including but
not limited to, a review of financial policies, procedures and
practices;
(ii)
an annual review and update of such risk assessment;
(iii)
annual testing and evaluation of one or more areas of the district’s
internal controls, taking into account risk, control weaknesses, size, and
complexity of operations.
(iv) preparation of reports, at least annually or more frequently as the trustees or board may direct, which analyze significant risk assessment findings, recommend changes for strengthening controls and reducing identified risks, and specify timeframes for implementation of such recommendations.
(2)
Conduct of internal audit function.
(i)
Personnel or entities conducting internal audits, reviews, or risk
assessments shall, for purposes of this section, be referred to as the internal
auditor and shall:
(a)
follow generally accepted auditing
standards;
(b)
be independent of district or BOCES business operations;
and
(c) have
the requisite knowledge and skills to complete the
work.
(ii)
A district or BOCES may use its employee(s), inter-municipal cooperative
agreements, shared services to the extent authorized by Education Law section
1950, or independent contractor(s) to fulfill the internal audit function,
provided that personnel or entities performing the function meet professional
auditing standards for independence between the auditor and the district and
comply with the applicable provisions of this
subdivision.
(iii)
The results of the work of the internal audit function shall be reported
directly to the board.
(iv) A
school district or BOCES with an internal audit function that meets or exceeds
the requirements of this subdivision shall not be required to replace or modify
its existing internal audit function.
(3)
Exemption.
(i)
The following school districts shall be exempt from the requirements of
this subdivision:
(a)
districts employing fewer than eight
teachers;
(b)
districts with actual general fund expenditures totaling less than five
million dollars in the previous school year;
or
(c)
districts with actual enrollment of less than three hundred students in
the previous school year.
(ii)
Any school district claiming such exemption shall annually certify to the
Commissioner that such school district meets the requirements set forth in
subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.
(4)
Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed as requiring a school
district in any city with a population of 125,000 or more to replace or modify
an existing internal audit function where such function already exists by
special or local law, so long as the superintendent of the district annually
certifies to the Commissioner that the existing internal audit function meets or
exceeds the requirements of Education Law section
2116-b.
(c)
Office of Claims Auditor.
The trustees, board of education of a school district or BOCES may
establish the office of claims auditor and appoint a claims auditor who shall
hold his or her position subject to the pleasure of such trustees or
board.
(1)
Qualifications.
(i)
The individual appointed as the claims auditor shall have the necessary
knowledge and skills to effectively audit the claims. The claims auditor shall have experience
with purchasing, bidding and claims, and shall be bonded as the trustees or
board shall require pursuant to section 170.2(d) of this
Part.
(ii)
A claims auditor shall not be required to be a resident of the school
district or BOCES supervisory district.
(iii)
No person shall be eligible for appointment to the office of claims
auditor who shall also be:
(a)
a trustee of the school district or member of the board of education or
BOCES;
(b)
the clerk or treasurer of
the school district, board of education or BOCES;
(c)
the superintendent of schools or other official of the school district or
BOCES responsible for business
management;
(d)
the person designated as purchasing agent for the school district or
BOCES;
(e)
clerical or professional personnel directly involved in accounting and
purchasing functions of the school district or BOCES or under the direct
supervision of the superintendent of schools or district superintendent;
(f)
the individual or entity responsible for the internal audit function
pursuant to subdivision (b) of this
section;
(g)
the independent auditor responsible for the annual external audit of the
financial statements; or
(h) a
close or immediate family member of an employee, officer, or contractor providing services to the district. For purposes of this subparagraph, a
"close family member" shall be defined as a parent, sibling or nondependent
child, and an "immediate family member" shall be defined as a spouse, spouse
equivalent, or dependent (whether or not
related).
(2)
Duties.
(i)
If the trustees, board of education or BOCES appoints a claims auditor to
audit and approve each claim, the claims auditor shall report directly to the
trustees or board on the result of the audits of claims, and shall report, as
determined by the trustees or board of education, to the clerk of the school
district or board of education or to the superintendent of schools, for
administrative matters such as workspace, time and
attendance.
(ii) The
claims auditor shall certify that each claim listed on the warrant was audited
and payment was authorized.
(3)
Delegation. The trustees,
board of education or BOCES may delegate the auditing of claims to an individual
through the use of:
(i) a school district or BOCES employee who
is not prohibited from being the claims
auditor;
(ii) an inter-municipal cooperative
agreement;
(iii) shared services to the extent
authorized by Education Law section 1950; or
(iv) independent contractors, provided that
the individual or organization serving as independent contractor meets the
standards for independence between the auditor and the district as set forth in
this subparagraph. For purposes of
this subparagraph, an individual or organization shall be considered independent
if such individual or organization:
(a) has no other responsibilities related to
the business operations of the school district or BOCES, as applicable;
(b) has no interest in any other contracts
with, and does not provide any goods or services to, the school district or
BOCES; and
(c) is not a close or an immediate family
member of anyone who has responsibilities related to business operations of the
school district or BOCES, or has an interest in any other contracts with the
school district or BOCES. For
purposes of this subparagraph, a "close family member" shall be defined as a
parent, sibling or nondependent child, and an "immediate family member" shall be
defined as a spouse, spouse equivalent, or dependent (whether or not
related).
(d)
Audit committees.
(1)
Establishment.
(i)
Except as provided in paragraph (3) of this subdivision, every school
district and board of cooperative educational services (BOCES) shall establish
by a resolution of the trustees or board an audit committee pursuant to
Education Law section 2116-c and the requirements of this subdivision. The audit committee shall consist of at
least three members, who shall serve without compensation, but who shall be
reimbursed for any actual and necessary expenditures incurred in relation to
attendance at meetings.
(ii) The
audit committee shall be established no later than January 1, 2006 as
either:
(a) a
committee of the trustees or board members;
(b) as a
committee of the whole; or
(c) an
advisory committee, which may include or be composed entirely of persons other
than trustees or members of the board if, in the opinion of the trustees or
board, such membership is advisable to provide accounting and auditing
experience. Persons other than
trustees or board members who serve on an advisory committee shall be
independent and shall not:
(1) be
employed by the district;
(2) be
an individual who within the last two years provided or currently provides
services or goods or services to the district;
(3) be
the owner of or have a direct and material interest in a company providing goods
or services to the district; or
(4) be a
close or immediate family member of an employee, officer, or contractor providing services to the district. For purposes of this subparagraph, a
"close family member" shall be defined as a parent, sibling or nondependent
child, and an "immediate family member" shall be defined as a spouse, spouse
equivalent, or dependent (whether or not
related).
(iii)
The members of the audit committee should collectively possess knowledge
in accounting, auditing, financial reporting, and school district
finances.
(iv) A member of an audit committee shall not be required to be a resident of the school district or BOCES supervisory district.
(2)
Duties and responsibilities.
The role of an audit committee shall be advisory and any recommendations
it provides to the trustees or board pursuant to this paragraph shall not
substitute for any required review and acceptance by the trustees or
board.
(i) It
shall be the responsibility of an audit committee
to:
(a)
provide recommendations regarding the appointment of the external auditor
for the district;
(b) meet
with the external auditor prior to commencement of the
audit;
(c)
review and discuss with the external auditor any risk assessment of the
district's fiscal operations developed as part of the auditor's responsibilities
under governmental auditing standards for a financial statement audit and
federal single audit standards if applicable;
(d)
receive and review the draft annual audit report and accompanying draft
management letter and, working directly with the external auditor, assist the
trustees or board in interpreting such documents;
(e) make
a recommendation to the trustees or board on accepting the annual audit
report;
(f)
review every corrective action plan developed by a district as required
under Education Law section 2116-a and assist the trustees or board in the
implementation of such plan; and
(g)
assist in the oversight of the internal audit function required by
Education Law section 2116-b, including, but not limited to, providing
recommendations regarding the appointment of the internal auditor for the
district, the review of significant findings and recommendations of the internal
auditor, monitoring of the district's implementation of such recommendations,
and participate in the evaluation of the performance of the internal audit
function.
(ii) The
audit committee shall develop, and submit to the trustees or board for approval,
a formal, written charter which shall include, but not be limited to, provisions
regarding the committee’s purpose, mission, duties, responsibilities and
membership requirements, consistent with the provisions of this
subdivision.
(iii)
The audit committee shall hold regularly-scheduled meetings and report to
the board on the activities of the audit committee on an as needed basis, but
not less than annually. The report
shall address or include, at a minimum:
(a) the activities of the audit
committee;
(b) a summary of the minutes of the
meetings;
(c) significant findings brought to the
attention of the audit committee;
(d) any indications of suspected fraud,
waste, or abuse;
(e) significant internal control findings;
and
(f)
activities of the internal audit
function.
(iv) The
audit committee may conduct an executive session pertaining to any matter set
forth in section 105 of the Public Officers Law or in paragraphs (2)(i)(b)
through (2)(i)(d) of this subdivision.
Any trustee or member of the board of education who is not a member of
such audit committee may be allowed to attend an executive session of an audit
committee meeting if authorized by a resolution of the trustees or board of
education.
(3) The
provisions of this subdivision shall not apply:
(i)
to a school district employing fewer than eight teachers;
or
(ii)
to the City School District of the City of New York, provided that the
Chancellor of such school district shall annually certify to the Commissioner
that such district has a process for review by an audit committee of the
district's annual audit that meets or exceeds the requirements of this
subdivision.
(e)
Annual audit.
(1)
Each school district, except those employing fewer than eight teachers,
and each BOCES shall obtain, in a form prescribed by the Commissioner, an annual
audit of its records by an independent certified public accountant or an
independent public accountant in accordance with the provisions of Education Law
section 2116-a(3) and the provisions of this subdivision. The board of education of the City
School District of the City of New York and community districts of such city
school district shall obtain an annual audit by the comptroller of the City of
New York, or by an independent certified public accountant in accordance with
the provisions of Education Law section 2116-a(3) and the provisions of this
subdivision.
(2) The
independent accountant shall present the report of the annual audit to the
trustees or board and provide a copy of the audit to each trustee or board
member. The trustees or board shall
adopt a resolution accepting the audit report and shall file a copy of the
resolution with the Commissioner. A
school district or BOCES shall file with the Commissioner its audit report for a
specific school year by October 15th of the following school year; provided that
the city school districts of the cities of Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse and
Yonkers, and the City School District of the City of New York and community
districts of such city school district, shall file their audit reports with the
Commissioner by January 1st of such following school
year.
(3)
Request for proposal process.
On or after July 1, 2005, all school districts, except the City School
District of the City of New York, and each BOCES shall utilize a competitive
request for proposal process when contracting for its annual audit. In addition, on or after July 1, 2005,
and applicable to all school districts and BOCES, no audit engagement shall be
for a term longer than five consecutive years, provided that nothing in this
subdivision shall preclude a school district or BOCES, in its discretion, from
permitting an independent certified public accountant or an independent public
accountant engaged under an existing contract for such services to submit a
proposal for such services in response to a request for competitive proposals,
or be awarded a contract to provide such services under a request for proposal
process. School
district or BOCES procurement policies and procedures adopted pursuant to
General Municipal Law section 104-b shall be amended, if necessary, to be
consistent with this requirement.
(4) Corrective action plan.
(i)
Within ninety days of receipt of such report or management letter, each
school district superintendent and BOCES district superintendent shall prepare a
corrective action plan, approved by the board, in response to any findings
contained in:
(a)
the annual external audit report or management letter;
(b)
a final audit report issued by the district's internal auditor;
(c)
a final audit report issued by the State
Comptroller;
(d)
a final audit report issued by the State Education Department;
or
(e)
a final audit report issued by the United States or an office, agency or
department thereof.
(ii)
The corrective action plan shall include expected date(s) of
implementation, where appropriate.
A school district or BOCES shall, to the extent practicable, begin
implementation of its corrective action plan no later than the end of the next
fiscal year.
(iii)
Each school district and BOCES shall file its corrective action plan with
the State Education Department.
2.
Subdivision (d) of section 170.2 of the Regulations of the Commissioner
of Education is amended, effective May 29, 2006, as
follows:
(d)
to establish the limits of and require the filing of an official
undertaking, with corporate surety, by the collector, treasurer, and [auditor]
claims auditor if [one is] appointed or, in lieu thereof, to establish
limits for and to include such officers in a blanket undertaking, in accordance
with the provisions of subdivision 2 of section 11 of the Public Officers
Law;
3.
Subdivision (r) of section 170.2 of the Regulations of the Commissioner
of Education is amended, effective May 29, 2006, as
follows:
(r)
to require, in districts with eight or more teachers, an annual audit
pursuant to section 170.12(e) of this Part [, in a form prescribed by the
Commissioner of Education, of all funds by a certified public accountant or by a
public accountant. Each board shall
adopt a resolution accepting the audit report and shall file a copy of the
resolution and report with the Commissioner of Education by October
first].
4.
Subdivision (a) of section 170.3 of the Regulations of the Commissioner
of Education is amended, effective May 29, 2006, as
follows:
(a) Each board of cooperative educational services shall have power and it shall be its duty to secure an annual audit pursuant to section 170.12(e) of this Part [, in a form prescribed by the Commissioner of Education, of all funds by a certified public accountant or by a public accountant. Each board shall adopt a resolution accepting the audit report and shall file a copy of the resolution and the report with the Commissioner of Education by October 1st].