Title: Presentation before the National Fraud Prevention Awareness Conference
1Presentation before the National Fraud
Prevention Awareness Conference
ARRA Related Audits and Investigations
- Joseph Comé
- Assistant Inspector General
- for Highway and Transit Audits
- Darren Murphy
- Program Director
- Office of the AIG for Aviation and
- Special Program Audits
- David Pouliott
- Program Director
- Office of the AIG for Highway
- and Transit Audits
- John W. Long
- National Director
2OIG Mission and Recent Accomplishments
- The OIG supports DOT in meeting its goals of
safety, reduced congestion, global connectivity,
environmental stewardship, security, and
organizational excellence. - OIG output for the past 6 months of fiscal year
2010 - 48 audit reports with 188 recommendations
- Over 800 million in financial recommendations
- 39 indictments and 31 convictions and
- Nearly 19 million in fines, restitutions, and
recoveries.
3On the Lookout for Stimulus Fraud
By MICHAEL COOPER Published September 17, 2009
The conventional estimate is that 7 percent of
government spending is lost to waste, fraud or
abuse. Some government officials are warning that
using that percentage, 55 billion worth of the
787 billion stimulus package would be lost. To
try to prevent that, the various Federal
inspector general offices, state comptrollers and
auditors, and Federal and local prosecutors have
trained their sights on the stimulus money.
4Recovery Act Added New Challenges to Longstanding
Ones
- The Recovery Act provided over 48 billion for
DOTs aviation, highway, transit, maritime, and
rail programs. Funded existing programs,
mandated new ones, and added substantial new
requirements.
After years of extensive research, I have
concluded beyond any doubt that I need more
grants!
5Distribution of ARRA Funds within DOT
DOT Component Stimulus Funds (Millions) Percent of Total
Federal Highway Administration 27,500 57.15
Federal Railroad Administration 9,300 19.33
Federal Transit Administration 8,400 17.46
Office of the Secretary of Transportation 1,500 3.12
Federal Aviation Administration 1,300 2.70
Maritime Administration 100 .21
Office of Inspector General 20 .04
Total 48,120 100.00
6OIGs ARRA Oversight Strategy 3-Phase
Risk-Based
- Audit
- Phase 1 Conduct comprehensive review of prior
work. - Phase 2 Conduct scans of DOT modal programs.
- Phase 3 Conduct audits of high-risk areas.
- Investigations
- Conduct fraud awareness and prevention
activities to alert DOT staff and grantees,
including contractors, at all levels of
government on how to recognize, prevent, and
report suspected fraud.
7Phase 1 Identify ARRA Challenges for DOT
- OIG Methodology
- Conduct a comprehensive review of prior DOT OIG
work, and - Relevant work of other organizations (e.g., GAO).
- Reported Challenges for DOT
- Ensure the Department's grantees properly spend
ARRA funds. - Implement new accountability requirements and
programs mandated by ARRA legislation (e.g.,
High Speed Rail). - Combat fraud, waste, and abuse. Grantees and
their contractors need to understand how to
recognize, prevent, and report potential fraud
to the appropriate authorities.
8Phase 2 Scan DOT ModalPrograms to Evaluate
Vulnerabilities
- Methodology
- Conduct scans across DOTs modal programs.
- Use a standardized methodology.
- Issue one report covering programs
Department-wide. - Reported Vulnerabilities
- Action required now to address problems
- In project selection for the FAA Airport
Improvement program and MARAD Small Shipyards
Grant Program. - In staffing at FAA, FRA, FTA, and MARAD.
- In DOT-wide suspension and debarment.
- Although no deficiencies are evident now,
sustained focus required regarding - Project selection for FHWA and FTA.
- Project and contract oversight at FHWS, FTA,
and OST. - Fraud.
9Oversight of state and local project planning
will require sustained FTA attention to avoid
imprudent spending. For instance, FTA provided
424 million to the Fulton Street Transit Center
(NYC) despite already experiencing large cost
increases and schedule delays.
Federal Transit Administration (FTA)
10MARAD decision making initially did not meet key
ARRA requirements for transparency and economic
considerations in its selection process.
Maritime Administration (MARAD)
Aker Philadelphia Shipyard received a 2.3
million ARRA grant.
11ARRA created new discretionary grant programs,
including 8 billion to jump start the creation
of high-speed rail corridors and intercity
passenger rail service (under FRA). Yet, FRA
lacked the capacity (expertise/staffing) to
effectively manage the program.
Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)
12ARRA Advisories Provide Timely Reporting of OIG
Concerns and Prompt Action
- OIG developed a new reporting tool to
expeditiously communicate results to ensure that
DOT, Congress, and taxpayers have real-time
information related to our Recovery Act work. - ARRA advisories were issued to DOT as we
identified vulnerabilities that warrant immediate
attentionfour advisories have been issued to
date. - Suspensions and Debarment (DOT-wide)
- Improper Payments (DOT-wide)
- Airport Improvement Program (FAA)
- Value Engineering Studies (FHWA)
13ARRA Advisory on FAAs Process for Awarding
Airport Grants
Darren Murphy Program Director, Office of the AIG
for Aviation and Special Program Audits
14ARRA Advisory on FAAs Process for Awarding
Airport Grants(Issued August 6, 2009)
- We reported FAA awarded some ARRA grants to
- Low-ranked airport projects with questionable
economic merit. - Airport sponsors with multi-year histories of
grant management problems.
15Projects with Questionable Economic Merit
ARRA Grant Recipient/Location Project Grant Amount
Ouzinkie, AK New airport/airfield 14.7 million
Akiachak, AK New airport/airfield 13.9 million
Findlay, OH Construct Taxiway 4.8 million
Warrensburg, MO New apron 1.7 million
Dover, DE Design new runway 0.95 million
Wilbur, WA Runway and taxiway extension 3.0 million
16Ouzinkie, Alaska
Ouzinkie is 10 miles via boat or air to Kodiak.
Ouzinkie already had 2,200-foot runway with no
history of serious safety incidents.
Grant Amount for new airport 14.7 million
Population 169
NPR Score 40
Based Aircraft 0
Aircraft Operations Avg. 42/month
17White House's Airport Stimulus Misguided?
Remote Murtha airport lands big bucks from
Washington
Alaska's Airport to Nowhere 15 Million for Town
of 150 People Small Villages Across State Have
Received Millions in Grants for Airport
Improvements
Federal money for Aspen airport upgrades called
into question
Tiny Airports Get Big Cut of Stimulus Cash Small,
Rural Airports Get Big Payouts While Safety
Violations at Major National Airports Get Little
Attention
18Single Audit Findings
- ARRA grant recipients with histories of grant
management problems raise doubt about their
ability to ensure ARRA funds effectively
administered - Pitkin County, Colorado
- Puerto Rico Ports Authority
- Guam International Airport Authority
- Owensboro, Kentucky
- Single audit findings included
- Allowable Costs,
- Cash Management, and
- Suspension and Debarment.
Guam International Airport
19New OMB Guidance
- In its updated ARRA guidance (dated 3/22/10),
OMB directed agencies to identify high-risk
areas, resolve audit findings within 6 months,
and consider additional monitoring and
inspections of ARRA recipients based on their
2009 single audit reports.
20Advisory Proposed Actions
- FAA needs to establish a selection process that
considers economic merit and is transparent. - FAA should cease awarding new grants to
lower-ranked NPR projects unless it can
demonstrate economic merit. - For those ARRA grants already awarded with no
funds expended, FAA needs to show economic merit
or consider withdrawing the grant. - FAA needs to enhance its risk-based approach to
ensure that recipients with prior grant problems
receive increased oversight.
21Agency Response and Follow-up Actions
- FAA has taken a number of positive actions since
the Advisory, including - Ceased funding any more low-ranked projects.
- Increased oversight including hiring Deloitte
Touche to look at a sample of ARRA payments from
24 airports. - Hired additional personnel to conduct physical
site inspections. - Raised the risk level for Owensboro, KY and
agreed to look at the single audit findings for
other grantees. - As a result of our Advisory, we also initiated
an audit of FAAs ARRA grant selection process,
with our report due out later this year.
22ARRA Advisory on FHWAs Oversight and Use of
Value Engineering Studies
Dave Pouliott Program Director, Office of the
AIG for Highway and Transit Audits
23ARRA Advisory on FHWAs Oversight and Use of
Value Engineering Studies (Issued June 28, 2010)
- VE studies objectively review reasonable design
alternatives on highway and bridge projects. - According to FHWA, state DOT VE programs
resulted in estimated cost savings of more than
6.1 billion over the past 3 fiscal years. - In June 2010, we issued an ARRA Advisory - some
states did not conduct VE studies or were not
timely. - Source OIG and FHWA's Federal Highway
Management Information System, as of April 2010
State/District ARRA Project Required VE Study Status Project Value In Millions
District of Columbia New York Avenue Not conducted 36.6
Alaska Willow to Kashwitna Not conducted 27.5
Missouri I-44 Not conducted 27.1
Pennsylvania Girard Point Bridge Conducted less than 2 months before the start of the project's contract bid process 77.4
North Carolina Fayetteville Outer Loop Conducted 1 month before the anticipated start of the project's contract bid process 55.1
24FHWA Actions Needed
- Our Advisory urged timely action before the
September 30, 2010 deadline for obligating ARRA
funds. - Update the Code of Federal Regulations.
- Ensure that FHWA, state, and local staff are
fully informed regarding VE legislative
requirements and FHWA's revised VE policy. - Require disclosure of VE requirements in their
Stewardship and Oversight Agreements with FHWA.
- FHWA Actions Taken
- Working to update the CFR.
- April 2010 - FHWA issued new VE performance
measures to be integrated into Stewardship
Agreements. - May 2010 - FHWA revised its VE policy and
addressed the timeliness of VE studies.
25Phase 3 Conduct Audits of ARRA High-Risk Areas
- OIG Methodology
- Conduct full audits of high risk areas within
each Operating Administration receiving ARRA
funding. - Reports Issued
- January 2010 Final Report on the DOTs
Suspension and Debarment Program - February 2010 Recovery Act Data Quality
Errors in Recipients' Reports Obscure
Transparency - March 2010 Weaknesses in DOT's Suspension and
Debarment Program Limit its Protection of
Government Funds - April, 2010 Federal Railroad Administration
Faces Challenges in Carrying Out Expanded Role
26Phase 3 Ongoing Work
- Ongoing Audits
- May 2009 ARRA Capital Assistance for High
Speed Rail Corridors and Intercity Passenger
Rail Service Programs - September 2009 FAA's Process for Awarding ARRA
Grants for Airport Projects - October 2009 Oversight of Federalaid Highway
Projects Administered by Local Public Agencies - October 2009 FHWAs FederalAid Highway Program
Oversight of Procurement Practices for
ARRAFunded Contracts at State Departments of
Transportation - November 2009 Job Creation Under ARRA
- November 2009 Evaluation of FHWAs National
Review Teams - December 2009 DOT Oversight of Recovery Act
Recipient Reporting - December 2009 DOT Security Controls over the
ARRA Related Websites - January 2010 High Speed Rail Forecasting Best
Practices - January 2010 FHWA's Oversight of High Dollar
ARRA Highway Projects - March 2010 FTA's Oversight of Major Transit
Projects in New York City - April 2010 High-Speed Rail and Intercity
Passenger Rail Infrastructure Access Agreements
27Investigative Oversight
John W. Long National Director, ARRA
Investigations (404) 562-3850 email John.W.Long
_at_oig.dot.gov
28Investigations Regional Offices
(1) Cambridge, MA (617) 494-2701 (2) New
York, NY (212) 337-1250 (3) Washington,
DC (202) 260-8580 (4) Atlanta, GA
(404) 562-3850 (5) Chicago, IL (312)
353-0106 (6) Ft. Worth, TX (817)
978-3236 (9) San Francisco, CA (415)
744-3090
29Strategic Investigative Plan
- Outreach and Training
- Proactive Investigative Oversight of ARRA funded
projects - Criminal and Civil Prosecutions
30Outreach and Training
- Fraud Awareness training for our transportation
partners - We have provided training to more than 15,000
transportation partners during more than 250
presentations - Hotline 24 hours for reporting ARRAfraud,
waste and abuse
31Proactive Investigative Activities
- Previously we have been a reactive agencyfor
ARRA funded projects, we are much more
proactive. - Investigators are contacting project managers,
inspectors, procurement managers, audit, and
claims personnel.
32Proactive Activities
- Criminal checks and Suspension and Debarment
checks on prime contractors, subcontractors, and
DBEs. - Reviewing Bidding Documents.
- Reviewing Certified Payrolls.
- Checking Certification and Net Worth Status on
DBEs. - Reviewing change orders, supplemental
agreements, and claims.
33Criminal Civil Prosecutions
- More than 40 active criminal investigations
involving ARRA funded projects - Types of Crimes
- False Statements,
- False Claims,
- Bribery,
- Bid-rigging,
- DBE Fraud,
- Prevailing Wage Fraud,
- Product Substitution, and
- Conflict of Interest
34TRENDS
- Under-bidding
- Bid-rigging
- Increase in DBE fraud
35www.oig.dot.gov
36Contact Information
- National OIG Hotline (800) 424 - 9071 or
(202) 366 -1461 - OIG Hotline E-mail hotline_at_oig.dot.gov
- OIG Web Page www.oig.dot.gov
37Emerging Issues From Audits and Investigations
- Continued Focus On
- Transparency in project selection and funding.
- Oversight of ARRA Construction Projects.
- Accounting for ARRA expenditures.
- Meeting reporting requirements.
38For More Informationhttp//www.oig.dot.gov/recove
ry
- Audit Announcements, Reports, and Testimonies
- Whistleblower Protection
- Monthly ARRA Financial Activity Report
- Economic Recovery Oversight Plan and Audit Plan
- OIG information governmentwide
http//www.recovery.gov/Accountability/inspectors
39Questions Comments