Paris-Union SD95 is required to provide a plan to the Nutrition Department on how to spend down the excess three-month average funds no later that Sept. 30 according to ISBE. | Edgar County Watchdogs
Paris-Union SD95 is required to provide a plan to the Nutrition Department on how to spend down the excess three-month average funds no later that Sept. 30 according to ISBE. | Edgar County Watchdogs
The Illinois State Board of Education sent us the following documents in response to our questions on the FBI search of District 95 Superintendent Jeremy Larson’s home earlier this week.
These are part of the $3.24 million in questioned or disallowed expenditures that apparently gave rise to the FBI’s search of the home.
This article consists of the Audit Findings and the Agreed Monitoring documents.
The Agreed Monitoring (Preliminary) Document lists the questioned expenditures and also lists which ones were accepted and which ones must be repaid.
From the FY2021 Internal Controls Audit:
- Finding #1 – Contracts over $25,000 were not all presented to the board for approval as required under board policy, quotes from more than one vendor may not have been obtained or kept on file for contracts over $10,000
- Finding #2 – No property record lists adequately documenting purchased equipment – this is repeated from the 2019 audit
- Finding #3 – failure to perform physical inventory
- Finding #4 – all equipment purchases were not approved, listing equipment as supply items, and not obtaining prior to approval on purchases over $5000
From the FY2021 Block Grant Audit:
- Finding #1 – No adequate financial records
- Finding #2 – Salaries, wages, and benefits paid with grant funds were not approved or adequate. This included a $30k stipend to the Mayo School Principal with no documentation of the purpose of the payment, $33,897 in administrative compensation, $26,483 in salaries for summer professional development, and $10,000 paid to a staff member as a consultant on a reading program
- Finding #3 – Some staff who received grant fund payments did not hold the required certificates
- Finding #4 – $54,627 paid from wrong accounts, including a $11,990 payment to a transportation contractor which was claimed twice under separate accounts
- Finding #5 – failed to submit accurate required periodical expenditure reports. Some reports based on budgeted amounts, not amounts actually expended
From the FY2021 Early Childhood Block Grant:
- Finding #1 – failed to maintain adequate financial records
- Finding #2 – Salaries, wages, and benefits paid with grant funds were not approved or adequate
- Finding #3 – failed to submit accurate required periodical expenditure reports
- Other findings include payments to the Wenz School Principal with no supporting documentation for the purpose of the payment
From the FY2021 Low Income Grant and teacher quality grant:
- Similar findings as previous grants – with the addition of unauthorized purchases for the band, sports, arts, high school, music, and nurse supplies. Software subscriptions, school messenger subscriptions, etc…
Read the report here.
This story was originally published by Edgar County Watchdogs. Read the original HERE.