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What to Expect and What to Ask Auditors
“If you have a job without aggravations, you don’t have a job.” — Malcolm Ford 1965 = $5 for small lawns, $10 for large lawns 1966 = Times Union delivery boy = $10 per week 1968-72 = Usher/Doorman at Shine Theaters = $1.60 per hour 1971 = Maintenance crew, Tobin’s Meatpacking = $3.72 per hour, graveyard […]
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“If you have a job without aggravations, you don’t have a job.” — Malcolm Ford
1965 = $5 for small lawns, $10 for large lawns
1966 = Times Union delivery boy = $10 per week
1968-72 = Usher/Doorman at Shine Theaters = $1.60 per hour
1971 = Maintenance crew, Tobin’s Meatpacking = $3.72 per hour, graveyard shift
1972 = Genesee Hospital = Clinical-lab technician, $4.25 per hour
1973 = Arthur Andersen = auditor, $11,400 annually
There you have it, the not-so illustrious career beginnings for yours truly.
In looking back, I find that the youth of today have nowhere near the variety of opportunities that I had. All of my early employment opportunities required me to interact with people at all levels of the socio-economic ladder. I attribute who and where I am today, after 40 years in public accounting, to have been the direct result of these employment experiences.
We now have an extremely tight job market and our youth communicate via social media rather than directly communicating with others. Not surprisingly, the youth of today face far greater challenges in forging career success.
As a segue to the topic of this column, I want to state that I had nothing to do with the Enron scandal that resulted in the demise of my once great employer, Arthur Andersen. The demise of Arthur Andersen resulted in Congress adopting the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002 and launched a government obsession with board governance and oversight responsibilities.
As I mentioned in a previous column several months ago, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed the “Non-Profit Revitalization Act of 2013” into law. The provisions of this legislation represent the most significant modifications to New York’s nonprofit laws in the past 40 years. The new law, effective July 1, 2014, expands board-governance responsibilities in many areas, including conflicts of interest, related-party transactions, executive compensation, and board interactions with external auditors. Now, more than ever, every auditor must have the ability to clearly communicate in an articulate and informative way to satisfy the needs and expectations of a volunteer tax-exempt board.
I know and have 40 years’ experience as an auditor in the tax-exempt sector. Therefore, the purpose of this column is to raise the awareness of board volunteers and management team members in the nonprofit sector regarding interactions, communications, and transparency with your external audit firm. All members of the CPA audit profession must be approaching their tax-exempt client audits with the knowledge that the bar of regulatory and client expectations has been raised considerably.
Since many tax-exempt organizations are completing their year-end financial statement audits, this column is devoted to recommendations regarding the proper involvement and communication between board members and external auditors. Use this year’s meetings with your audit committee and board to ensure that your nonprofit is in compliance with these new regulatory requirements.
Nonprofit board and management team members need the following information to understand, evaluate, and modify current board governance and fiscal-oversight policies. One thing is clear from the requirements of the Non-Profit Revitalization Act and the federal Sarbanes-Oxley Act — the strategic requirements for establishing and maintaining effective board governance require the following.
The following is a brief summary of what to expect from your auditors, and more importantly, what to ask them.
What to expect
1. Under the Non-Profit Revitalization Act, auditors are required to meet with the full board or its designated audit committee twice each year. Once to review the audit scope, plan, and risk areas identified by the audit firm. The second meeting is typically focused on a presentation and analysis of results, as described further below.
2. Auditors are required to communicate certain matters mandated by auditing standards — SAS No. 114. This report will cover many areas, including important disclosures related to audit adjustments, management estimates used in preparing the financials, fraud/illegal acts discovered in the audit, internal control weaknesses, and any unusual accounting adjustments reflected in the financial statements. This required document is a qualitative assessment of the audit process.
3. Auditing standards have continued to emphasize the auditor’s responsibilities in communicating internal-control recommendations. If you receive a material weakness or significant deficiency comment, it should include specific discussion with the auditor and a prescribed timeframe for corrective action.
4. Auditors are required to report internal-control weaknesses and recommendations identified during the audit process. If your organization has not received internal-control recommendations in a formal management letter, ask the auditors why. The absence of a management letter should not be interpreted as perfection in your internal-control procedures.
5. The audited financial statements, with required footnote disclosures, are virtually unintelligible and mind-numbing to the typical reader lacking formal accounting expertise. At a minimum, the board should understand what type of audit opinion has been provided — unmodified or modified — and whether any new or revised footnote disclosures have been included.
6. In addition to these required reports, many quality oriented audit firms will provide value-added information to board and management, as follows:
A clear and comprehensive audit report communicated to the board or its designated committee is a critical component of effective board governance and oversight.
What to ask your auditors?
Finally, board members should ask questions of their auditors. The following is my “Top 10” list of questions to ask auditors:
1. What was the surplus (deficit) for the year by program or service component and how were deficits subsidized?
2. Is there a balance on the bank line of credit at year-end and why?
3. How many days revenue are outstanding in accounts receivable, and is the number appropriate for our industry segment?
4. What percentage of total expenses has been incurred for administration and overhead, and are we in compliance with the governor’s Executive Order No. 38?
5. Are vendor payments, required payroll-tax deposits, and retirement-plan contributions being made in a timely fashion?
6. What was the amount of capital purchases for the year and the net change in outstanding debt obligations (that is, how much was financed of total capital purchases)?
7. What government-sponsored regulatory reform initiatives (example: managed care) and/or enforcement audits (example: OMIG/OIG) are in process, and has any liability settlement been recorded?
8. How does the external auditor assess our financial statements in the spectrum from conservative to aggressive in terms of accounting presentation (example: bad-debt reserve)?
9. What concerns, if any, do you have regarding the adequacy of our internal controls or the competency of our financial staff?
10. Are there any new or pending accounting pronouncements or standards that will have an impact on our organization?
The questions above represent examples of the types of discussion that are important dialogue between board members and audit representatives. In addition, at least once each year, the auditors should meet with the independent board members/audit committee in executive session. As a standard process, this approach establishes a healthy environment for communication directly between the board and your audit firm.
Finally, make sure that you have implemented the necessary policy and procedure changes to be in compliance with the Non-Profit Revitalization Act prior to July 1, 2014.
Your bottom-line objective should be to achieve transparency and accountability in a practical and SAFE manner.
Gerald J. Archibald, CPA, is a partner in charge of the management advisory services at The Bonadio Group. Contact him at (585) 381-1000, or email: garchibald@bonadio.com
Don’t you love elections? In the campaigns for the important ones, we get to see frantic tap dancing. We get to see some foaming at the mouth. This year’s campaigns promise to entertain. In New York, we already see our Governor Andrew Cuomo moving to the right. He knows he has most Democrats’ votes in
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Don’t you love elections? In the campaigns for the important ones, we get to see frantic tap dancing. We get to see some foaming at the mouth.
This year’s campaigns promise to entertain. In New York, we already see our Governor Andrew Cuomo moving to the right. He knows he has most Democrats’ votes in the bag. Now if he can just win over some Republicans. Then he could boast that he can win votes from both sides of the street. If Hillary Clinton does not run, he could use such credentials to win the nomination to run for the White House.
So to burnish those credentials, he is standing tall for charter schools, and staring down the teachers’ unions. This will earn him more votes from the right for sure.
In this year’s elections for Congress, we will see many Republicans run. We will see many Democrats scamper, and scurry, and hide. Those in close elections must run from Obamacare. Majorities of voters tell pollsters they just don’t like it.
So what do you do if you are a Democrat in a district where a few votes could end your career? When Obamacare comes up, you change the subject. You talk with your armpit about making changes. If you voted for it, you are in real trouble.
The president has postponed this provision and delayed that provision. Twenty-five times or more. To little avail. His shenanigans have not moved the needles in the polls. Ten layers of lipstick and rouge cannot silence the oinks of this one. If you are a Dem in a close race, you have to live with it. Or, the opposite.
Meanwhile, if the president’s plane flies over your district, you leap into a bomb shelter. When his name comes up, you pretend you are deaf. You sure don’t invite him to your campaign rallies. Not if you want to win, you don’t. His approval ratings are down as low as 38 percent in one recent poll and averaging about 43 percent across the board.
A lot of Dems are squeezed between the proverbial rock and a hard place for the upcoming campaign.
Meanwhile, we can already hear a few war cries for the 2016 election for the White House.
Likely candidate Ted Cruz has called for the end of the IRS as we know it. Now, normally only extremists applaud this idea. But this time around?
It is clear to a lot of folks that this administration used the IRS to punish its conservative opponents. It has battered opponents of this administration with audits. It green-lighted most liberal groups that applied for tax-free status. It held up the process for 200 conservative groups. Held them at bay for two election cycles. This sort of stuff frightens folks. Sickens some.
The president told Bill O’Reilly there was “not even a smidgen of corruption” in this scandal. A few days later, the woman who headed up that department took the
Fifth before a congressional committee. The purpose of the Fifth is to protect your backside from prosecution — for criminal activities. Or if you are a heroine, to protect others. Right down to the last smidgen. Note that the word incriminating has “crim” in it. As does the word criminal.
My point is that the idea of abolishing the IRS could become very popular the next few years. Along with another idea Cruz presented: Permanently banning former members of Congress from lobbying members of Congress.
He proposed repealing every word of Obamacare. He proposed term limits for federal lawmakers.
Majorities of voters tell pollsters they like these ideas. Which should make for some very entertaining election campaigns the next few years.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home near Oneonta, in addition to his radio shows and new TV show. For more information about him, visit his website at www.tomasinmorgan.com
Spirit Airlines CEO to deliver keynote address at CenterState CEO annual meeting
SYRACUSE — CenterState CEO announced that Ben Baldanza, president and CEO of Spirit Airlines, will deliver the keynote address at its annual meeting on April
Letter to the Editor: Quality pre-K is a critical opportunity
Editor’s note: The authors say they wrote this letter in response to the editorial by Norman Poltenson, entitled, “Pre-K is a failure, so let’s make it universal” in the Jan. 31 issue of The Central New York Business Journal. There is overwhelming, research-based evidence that early education creates critical opportunities, especially for at-risk children living
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Editor’s note: The authors say they wrote this letter in response to the editorial by Norman Poltenson, entitled, “Pre-K is a failure, so let’s make it universal” in the Jan. 31 issue of The Central New York Business Journal.
There is overwhelming, research-based evidence that early education creates critical opportunities, especially for at-risk children living in poverty. Studies have shown that it more than pays for itself in long-term life improvement impacts, such as lower arrest rates and improved graduation rates, which were not measured by the [federal government’s] Head Start impact study.
There have been numerous reports that actually demonstrate positive impacts from the Head Start program. Eliana Garces’ (UCLA) and David Deming’s (Harvard) rigorous studies determined that Head Start graduates were more likely than their peers to graduate from high school and attend college, and less likely to be unemployed. Another study by Jens Ludwig (University of Chicago) discovered that reduced childhood mortality was a result of Head Start participation, due to various early screening processes and appropriate treatment referrals.
A researcher from the University of California learned that parents of Head Start attendees are much more likely to spend additional time reading to their children and taking them to museums, thus enhancing their overall educational experience. Even dads who did not live with their families ended up spending an extra day a month with their children. Alternate early education initiatives were found to have similar long-term positive outcomes.
As Nicholas Kristof points out in his recent New York Times article, on which much of this background information is based, preschool could be the only national issue that has a majority of support from voters of both parties. In our region, Senator [Kirsten] Gillibrand (D) and Congressman [Richard] Hanna (R) have joined together to sponsor legislation that expands access to pre-kindergarten programs nationwide.
“High-quality early learning guarantees a reduction in spending on entitlements, welfare, and incarceration,” U.S. Representative Hanna said. “It also lowers obesity rates, helping to reduce health-care costs. By focusing on early education, we can begin to break the back of intergenerational poverty, producing more taxpayers and a more competitive America through a better-educated, growing middle class. We cannot guarantee every child equal success in life, but we can promise them the opportunity to be successful.”
According to economist and Nobel Laureate James Heckman, investing early in children’s lives yields the highest return in human capital, due primarily to future reduction in crime, increased earnings, and higher tax revenue. Every dollar spent on quality early learning can produce returns of $7 to $17, with the largest returns occurring between birth and third grade.
Investing in preschool today at approximately $8,000 per child per year is much more cost effective than paying $90,000 per child per year for juvenile-detention services later, or subsidizing living and service costs during a lifetime of unemployment. The United States trails most of the world’s developed nations when it comes to four-year-old preschool participation, and that seems to be reflected in our lackluster high-school completion. We rank as low as 21st for OECD countries (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) for high-school graduation rates, falling far behind the top five — Portugal, Slovenia, Finland, Japan, and the United Kingdom.
“If we expect our children to walk through the doors of our colleges and universities tomorrow, and succeed in our economy in the years ahead — we need universal pre-K,” said Sen. Gillibrand in a February news release. “High quality early learning leads to strong cognitive, social, emotional and language development — key skills for a bright future.”
Peggy O’Shea
President & CEO
The Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties, Inc.
Barbara W. Henderson
Vice President for Programs & Community Initiatives
The Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties, Inc.
Brenda E. Episcopo
Executive Director
United Way of the Valley and Greater Utica Area
Kait Birnie has joined Birnie Bus Service, Inc. She is the first member of the third generation of the Birnies to join the family business.
The Syracuse University (SU) football staff has added Bobby Acosta, who will direct the Orange tight ends. The head coach at Widener University in 2013,
New York’s initial jobless claims jump in latest week
The number of people applying for new unemployment-insurance benefits in New York state in the week ending March 1 nearly doubled to 37,824 from 19,115
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Medical Management Resources, Inc. (MMRI)
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Levene Gouldin & Thompson, LLP
The law firm of Levene Gouldin & Thompson, LLP announced that Lauren Kiley Saleeby has become a partner with the firm and Matthew V. Carrigg
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.