Written by GARY D. ROBERTSON
North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper’s administration failed to thoroughly monitor how $3.1 billion in federal coronavirus relief funds it oversaw last year were being used, increasing the risk for misuse, a state audit said Thursday.
The report from State Auditor Beth Wood’s office focuses on federal funds that the state received toward COVID-19 aid in the spring of 2020. The legislature proceeded to pass laws directing how $3.6 billion should be given to state agencies, education, local governments, hospitals and nonprofits for a host of medical, economic and recovery needs.
The Office of State Budget and Management and a new temporary state Pandemic Recovery Office within OSBM were charged with carrying out the laws, reporting how money was being used and ensuring that the spending followed U.S. Treasury Department rules.
But auditors determined that the Pandemic Recovery Office failed to design procedures to ensure the money was being spent the way the legislature required and was achieving the anticipated results. The audit says it performed “limited monitoring” of the funds by failing to independently verify the monthly expenditure reportsfiled by recipients until November, when the majority of funds were already spent.
The Pandemic Recovery Office also failed to ensure the nearly 500 recipients of $3.1 billion combined through October set objectives on how funds would be spent and measurements of how to meet goals, according to the audit.
That includes whether the Department of Health and Human Services was spending $423 million it received for things like COVID-19 testing, contact tracing and mental health services, or whether $34 million for hospitals was spent on patient care. Almost 10% of the recipients of funds failed to report any objectives, according to the review.
“As a result, (the pandemic office) was limited in its ability to know whether Coronavirus Relief Funds were achieving legislatively intended results and to take timely corrective action if necessary,” auditors wrote.
According to the audit, the Pandemic Recovery Office said it decided to prioritize coordinating and distributing funds and providing technical assistance to recipients, instead of ensuring it had ways to measure results.
In a letter attached to Wood’s report, State Budget Director Charlie Perusse and pandemic office Executive Director Stephanie McGarrah wrote, “we take the findings presented in this report very seriously.” They said changes were already being made to ensure the Pandemic Recovery Office “will be well-equipped to handle the additional federal recovery dollars” the state will receive.
The legislature will have to decide how to spend another $5.3 billion earmarked for North Carolina in the American Rescue Plan approved by Congress in March.
Perusse and McGarrah also wrote the General Assembly funded the Pandemic Recovery Office at half of the amount requested, which led to understaffing and delays in verifying spending. The pandemic office is now hiring additional staff and strengthening its nine-part monitoring process, they wrote. Longer-term funding is also being sought for the pandemic office, which otherwise closes at the end of 2021.
Wood, a Democrat like Cooper, is elected statewide separately from the governor.
Photo via the North Carolina Department of Public Safety.
Related Stories
‹

Audit: Too Many Payment Errors in Chief NC Jobless ProgramWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON There are too many monetary payment errors by North Carolina’s unemployment office for its chief jobless benefits program, according to a state auditor’s report released Wednesday. The performance audit of the state Division of Employment Security examined the North Carolina Unemployment Insurance program from April 2016 through March 2021. Auditors also […]

Plan Aids NC Principals Otherwise Penalized for Pay ChangeWritten by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS North Carolina’s schools chief unveiled a plan on Wednesday that would prevent some public school principals from facing pay cuts in 2023 due to an alteration in how performance-based compensation is calculated. Superintendent of Public Instruction Catherine Truitt said about $4.5 million in federal COVID-19 relief funds for education would […]
![]()
$750M in Virus Aid for NC Broadband Expansion OK’d by HouseThe North Carolina House unanimously approved legislation on Wednesday that aims to spend $750 million in federal coronavirus relief funds to install high-speed internet in rural and remote areas lacking it. The legislation would set aside $350 million in discretionary American Rescue Plan funds earmarked for North Carolina to expand a relatively new state broadband […]

NC Senate Tax Cut Plan Includes Virus Aid for BusinessesWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON A broad tax cut proposal from North Carolina Senate Republicans that began its advance in the chamber on Tuesday also contains federal COVID-19 relief money to give more aid to businesses that previously received federal or state pandemic assistance. GOP finance leaders unveiled an amended version of its tax plan, some of which […]
![]()
Republicans Promote Pandemic Relief They Voted AgainstWritten by STEVE PEOPLES Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., said it pained her to vote against the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan. But in the weeks that followed, the first-term Republican issued a news release celebrating more than $3.7 million from the package that went to community health centers in her district as one of her “achievements.” She […]

NC Lawmakers Looking at Billions More in Federal Virus AidNorth Carolina legislators are starting to fill in more details on distributing the latest tranche of coronavirus relief money approved in Washington. The Senate’s budget-writing committee recommended on Thursday legislation that would formally appropriate $6.35 billion allocated for North Carolina in the American Rescue Plan approved by Congress in March. That law already determined how […]

NC House Gives Unanimous Ok To $1.7B COVID Relief MeasureWritten by GARY D. ROBERTSON The North Carolina House voted unanimously Wednesday to distribute another $1.7 billion in federal COVID-19 relief funds, with most going toward virus testing and prevention, public university campuses, child-care assistance and transportation projects. The bill, the latest in a series of measures allocating funds appropriated by Congress to the states, was on the […]

NC Senate OK's Bill Distributing Federal COVID Relief MoneyNorth Carolina state senators on Wednesday unanimously approved a bill to distribute money the state has secured through the federal government’s December stimulus package. If approved by the House and subsequently signed by Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, schools would get $1.6 billion to help reopen classrooms with in-person instruction, purchase educational technology and reduce learning […]
![]()
COVID-19 Money to Improve Internet Access for NC StudentsNorth Carolina’s state government is using federal COVID-19 relief dollars to purchase equipment so more public school students can access online classes and homework help. Gov. Roy Cooper announced that nearly $40 million would go toward funding a new partnership involving his administration. The project, called NC Student Connect, is designed to improve reliable internet […]

Cooper Says He'll Sign North Carolina COVID-19 Aid PackageNorth Carolina’s Democratic governor announced Friday that he will sign a Republican-authored plan to spend $1.1 billion of the state’s remaining federal COVID-19 relief funds on aid to families with children, unemployment benefits and efforts to fight the virus. Gov. Roy Cooper’s announcement came a day after he received the package from legislators. It includes […]
›
Comments on Chapelboro are moderated according to our Community Guidelines