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Extraído del Informe Consolidado

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Los Angeles County Grand Jury • 2014-2015

LOS Angeles County

Published: June 23, 2015 2 pages
View PDF View Full Original

Findings 15 findings

F1 Page 162
The Office of the Inspector General needs access to Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department confidential and employee records.
F2 Page 162
The Office of the Inspector General needs to maintain independence from political pressure.
F3
A Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors 2013 resolution releases county general funds, to the Community Development Commission for affordable housing, over five years.
F4
The Community Development Commission Tracker project management reports in their current format do not provide the Board of Supervisors with sufficient information needed to perform ongoing oversight, particularly original budget vs. actual expenditures and original vs. revised timelines by project.
F5
The Board of Supervisors, sitting as the commissioners of the Community Development Commission, has not taken a sufficiently active role in providing comprehensive oversight of all projects after funding allocations are made.
F6
The Board of Supervisors has not fully adopted the 2012 Affordable Housing and Economic Development Framework and Implementation Strategy and has underfunded the affordable housing development goals by $98,196,500.
F7
Staffing levels may be insufficient if Notices of Funding Availability of a higher value are released.
F8
Without public access to city identifier numbers, city staff cannot respond to public inquiries.
F9
After the public hearing, data is confidential, available to the property owner and the city only, until the project is approved.
F10
The City of Los Angeles Department of Public Works’ website is not organized to help the public register disputes.
F11
The City of Los Angeles Department of Public Works has no dedicated phone number that the public can use to register disputes.
F12
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors is moving toward consolidating most of Los Angeles County data centers into one disaster-resistant facility.
F13
Los Angeles County information systems use many different programming languages. The county has no standard or guideline on how to select a programming language for use on its development projects.
F14
There are no enterprise-wide programming standards for the languages that are used. There is no central guide to good programming practices.
F15
In Los Angeles County, there is a countywide tendency to replace existing systems rather than modernize them, in part because COBOL is unjustifiably considered obsolete, and lack of expertise in COBOL contributes to this tendency.

Recommendations 6

Commendations 1

No Responses Found 1

Government entities assigned to respond to this report. No response documents have been linked in our database.

Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Elected County Office