Reports
Northside Independent School District's Student Participation Counts Reported for ESEER-Funded Programs
Determine whether Northside reported verifiable counts of students who participated in ESSER-funded summer learning, summer enrichment, and comprehensive afterschool programs.
Clark County School District's Allowable Use of ESSER Grant Funds (Nevada)
Determine whether Clark County School District expended American Rescue Plan Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ARP ESSER) grant funds for allowable purposes in accordance with applicable requirements.
Nye County School District's Allowable Use of ESSER Grant Funds (Nevada)
Determine whether Nye County School District expended American Rescue Plan Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ARP ESSER) grant funds for allowable purposes in accordance with applicable requirements.
Lincoln County School District's Allowable Use of ESSER Grant Funds
Determine whether Lincoln County School District expended American Rescue Plan Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ARP ESSER) grant funds for allowable purposes in accordance with applicable requirements.
Wisconsin’s Administration and Oversight of the Emergency Assistance to Non-Public Schools Grant Funds
Determine whether the Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction designed and implemented (1) application processes that adequately assessed nonpublic schools' eligibility for EANS-funded services or assistance and complied with other applicable requirements and (2) oversight processes to ensure that EANS-funded services or assistance were used for allowable purposes.
Audit of Health Resources and Services Administration's COVID-19 Supplemental Grant Funding for Health Centers
The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) awarded nearly $2 billion in supplemental grant funding to 1,387 health centers nationwide in fiscal year (FY) 2020 to respond to the COVID-19 public health emergency. The funding was intended to support the health centers' activities related to the detection, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of COVID-19, including maintaining or increasing health center capacity and staffing levels during the pandemic, and expanding COVID-19 testing. The performance period for each of these one-time supplemental grant awards, which HRSA began awarding in March 2020, is 12 months. Health centers were permitted to charge to their awards pre-award costs in order to support expenses related to the COVID-19 public health emergency dating back to January 20, 2020. We will determine whether health centers used their HRSA COVID-19 supplemental grant funding in accordance with Federal requirements and grant terms.
Health Resources and Services Administration's Monitoring of High-Risk COVID-19 Grantees
The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) is the primary Federal agency for improving health care to people who are geographically isolated and economically or medically vulnerable. HRSA should identify and mitigate risks related to awarding grants to health centers to minimize the potential misuse or loss of Federal funds. In spring 2020, HRSA awarded through three programs nearly $2 billion to approximately 1,380 health centers in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. To expedite distribution of this funding, HRSA did not require that health centers apply for grants. Instead, it made funds immediately available to health centers. Health centers had 30 days from the award release date to submit the information that is usually submitted, reviewed, and approved during the grant application process prior to a grantee receiving funding. We will determine whether HRSA had an effective process for identifying and monitoring high-risk health centers that received COVID-19 grants.