Score: +8 (19/21/11)
Santa Barbara County Grand Jury • 2017-2018

Internal Controls in the County of Santa Barbara

Published: June 18, 2018 11 pages
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Findings and Recommendations 11 findings

F1
The Internal Audit Division of the Santa Barbara County Auditor-Controller’s Office had a funded and filled staff of 10 FTE prior to the 2008 recession. Just prior to the discovery of the 2017 fraud, the funded staff had fallen to 5 FTE, and only 2.5 of those were filled.
Related Recommendations (1)
R1
That the Auditor-Controller maintain the number of Internal Audit Division staff at the funded level.
F2
The financial management guidelines issued by the County of Santa Barbara Auditor-Controller are not applied consistently in operational departments, nor is compliance with those guidelines routinely audited by the Auditor-Controller.
Related Recommendations (3)
R2a
That County Board of Supervisors direct staff to use the consistent application of financial guidelines issued by the Auditor-Controller’s Office as part of the annual personnel management process.
R2b
That the Auditor-Controller’s Office establish an audit schedule for County administration at all levels to ensure their proper compliance with the County financial management guidelines.
R2c
That the Santa Barbara County Sheriff, District Attorney, Auditor-Controller, Clerk Recorder- Assessor-Registrar of Voters and Treasurer-Tax Collector-Public Administrator require consistent application of financial guidelines issued by the Auditor-Controller’s Office as part of the annual personnel management process.
F3
Knowledge of financial management and risks by managers in some departments in the County of Santa Barbara is insufficient.
Related Recommendations (3)
R3a
That the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors direct staff to require training in financial management (including County financial guidelines, FIN, and reporting and accountability procedures) for all department and program heads.
R3b
That the County Board of Supervisors direct staff to make successful completion of this training a part of staff evaluations.
R3c
That the Santa Barbara County Sheriff, District Attorney, Auditor-Controller, Clerk Recorder- Assessor-Registrar of Voters and Treasurer-Tax Collector-Public Administrator direct all program managers to require mandatory training in financial management (including County financial guidelines, FIN, and reporting and accountability procedures) for all department and program heads.
F4
Knowledge of potential conflicts of interest among some senior County of Santa Barbara employees is inadequate.
Related Recommendations (1)
R4
That the Board of Supervisors develop procedures for the conduct of annual training on conflict of interest policy for all relevant categories of employees.
F5
There is no consistent policy of requiring program heads, division heads, or department heads within Santa Barbara County departments to account for spending under their control to their superiors and/or to the CEO through an annual formal and written statement.
Related Recommendations (2)
R5a
That the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors direct all program heads, division heads, and department heads to sign annual statements to their managers, stating that all funds under their control have been managed in compliance with County financial management guidelines and the County’s Internal Control Policy.
R5b
That The Santa Barbara County Sheriff, District Attorney, Auditor-Controller, Clerk Recorder- Assessor-Registrar of Voters and Treasurer-Tax Collector-Public Administrator direct all program managers to sign annual statements to their supervisors, stating that all funds under their control have been managed in compliance with County financial management guidelines and the County’s Internal Control Policy.
F6
The Jury found that the importance of the work of the Internal Audit Division within the Office of the Auditor-Controller and of internal controls generally has a low priority across County government.
Related Recommendations (1)
R6
That the Board of Supervisors direct staff to incorporate performance measures into the budget process to highlight the importance of internal controls for every department in County government.
F7
It was stated by senior staff that a comprehensive investigation into the strengths and weaknesses of the internal controls in the County would be conducted by an outside consultant after the fraud; no such investigation took place.
Related Recommendations (1)
R7
That the Board of Supervisors direct staff to contract a complete independent evaluation and audit of internal controls, including the issuance of an opinion on the effectiveness of such controls and recommendations for improvement.
F8
The Jury found that the actions taken by Santa Barbara County management in response to the 2017 fraud in the Department of Public Works were slow and inadequate.
Related Recommendations (1)
R8
That the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors direct staff to issue a public report stating the steps taken and their effective dates to strengthen public financial management in the County following the 2017 Department of Public Works fraud.
F9
The Financial Information Network is an insufficient and inefficient system with many weaknesses that have caused most departments to create, or to have created, complementary financial software. Some of the weaknesses in FIN may have contributed to the 2017 Department of Public Works fraud.
Related Recommendations (3)
R9a
That the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors direct staff to commission an independent evaluation of the benefits and costs of acquiring, installing and maintaining Enterprise Resource Planning software from a major vendor. The evaluation should: • be procured competitively and should exclude any firm or individual that has previously worked with the County to avoid conflicts of interest; • compare major software options, analyze where such options have been used in governments of comparable size to the County; • present a full analysis of the costs of and benefits of current financial management software used in the Auditor-Controller’s Office and throughout the County Government; and • give a proper comparison to the costs and benefits of Enterprise Resource Planning software.
R9b
That the Enterprise Resource Planning evaluation be presented at an open session of the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors to allow public comment.
R9c
That all Santa Barbara County staff using FIN, or its eventual successor, submit annual financial disclosure.
F10
The Jury found that minimum professional and academic qualifications for financial staff positions are not standardized nor consistent throughout departments in Santa Barbara County.
Related Recommendations (1)
R10
That policy throughout Santa Barbara County be standardized with respect to the minimum academic and other professional qualifications of financial staff.
F11
Some Santa Barbara County staff commented that there might be significant other potential financial risks in Santa Barbara County, including management of property tax reimbursements and warrant payments through the Sheriff’s Civil Bureau.
Related Recommendations (2)
R11a
That the Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors direct staff to commission an independent audit of the property tax reimbursements made through the Santa Barbara County Assessor’s Office during the past 10 years.
R11b
That the Board of Supervisors direct staff to commission an independent audit of civil warrant payments made through the County Sheriff’s Office during the past 10 years.

Conclusions 15

Observations 28

Agency Responses 5

Government agencies' official responses to this report's findings and recommendations. Click on a response to see the structured breakdown.

No Responses Found 2

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

Santa Barbara County County Clerk-Recorder Elected County Office
Santa Barbara County Treasurer-Tax Collector Elected County Office