As many have focused on the financial reports for Costa Mesa’s 60th Anniversary kickoff celebration, the City’s Comprehensive Annual Financial Report has been released. It can be viewed here .
The good news is that total revenues of $121,363,178 exceeded
expenditures of $111,012,567 by $10,350,611.
Unfortunately, the City also took an unusual loss of over $10 million,
mostly due to writing off the long term debt owed the city by the Costa Mesa Redevelopment
Agency which, due to State legislation, no longer exists. The debt has been deemed unrecoverable.
The auditors, White Nelson Diehl Evans LLP, found no
evidence of any wrong doing but had this to say in their cover letter dated
December 26, 2013:
…as described in the accompanying
schedule of findings and questioned costs, we identified certain deficiencies
in internal control that we considered to be material weaknesses.
A deficiency in internal control
exists when the design or operation of a control does not allow management or
employees, in the normal course of performing their assigned functions, to
prevent, or detect and correct, misstatements on a timely basis. A material
weakness is a deficiency, or a combination of deficiencies, in internal
control, such that there is a reasonable possibility that a material
misstatement of the City’s financial statements will not be prevented, or
detected and corrected on a timely basis [emphasis added]. A significant deficiency is a
deficiency, or a combination of deficiencies, in internal control that is less
severe than a material weakness, yet important enough to merit attention by
those charged with governance. We consider the deficiencies described in the
accompanying schedule of findings and questioned costs as Finding Numbers
2013-01 and 2013-02 to be material weaknesses.
"a structured ethics policy establishes organizational standards for ethics, morals, and an overall 'regard for the rules' … within an entity."
I will definitely be looking into this further, and encourage local residents to continue to monitor City spending.
3 comments:
How does one fix a process that one has no visibility into?
Sounds like a good audit job. I really like the ethics recommendation. I hope this opens some eyes.
Bravissima!
Welcome back, Sandy. High time some intellect got applied to these matters, both yours and the accountants'.
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