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21 August 2002

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Title: 21 August 2002


1
PRESENTATION TO PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC
WORKS
Ms L Bici
21 August 2002
2
CONTROL ENVIRONMENT
AGs finding Managements response
There were serious shortcomings in the Departments system of internal control which resulted in supporting documentation for significant amounts and certain critical reconciliations not being available. Furthermore, the overall internal control environment of the department was weakened by a shortage of appropriate skills and a high staff turn-over. It was also not possible for me to perform alternative audit procedures. Consequently, I did not obtain all the information and explanations I deemed necessary to satisfy myself as to the accuracy and validity of the amounts disclosed in the financial statements. The shortcomings of internal control reported by the Auditor-General mainly relate to the submission of supporting documentation and reconciliations. Both areas were influenced by the inherent limitations of the systems that are used by the Department for processing of financial information. This fact was acknowledged by the Auditor-General during the conduct of the audit. The Department is currently involved in a transformation process that includes systems development that will address the inherent limitations of the current systems.
3
SYSTEMS RECONCILIATIONS
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AGs findings Managements response
The Department prepared its financial statements from the information contained in the Financial Management System (FMS), with the majority of the financial information originating from subsystems such as the Personnel and Salary System (PERSAL), the Works Control System (WCS) and the Property Management Information System (PMIS) However, the audit revealed that reconciliations, which are considered to be key control measures, are not adequately prepared to ensure the accuracy and validity of the amounts reflected in the FMS and eventually disclosed in the financial statements. Some inherent system limitations also exist which make the performance of reconciliations difficult. The following are the specific audit findings in this regard The reconciliation of the Departments financial management system (FMS) with the Departments business systems is made difficult by lack of integration on these systems. The lack of integration between these systems affects the processing time of data between the business system and the financial management system (FMS) due to its batch processing. i.e. These systems have different cut-off dates. Different Regions process payments in their individual business processes. In compliance with National Treasury payment procedures these payments are consolidated and paid at the end of the day as a single payment to each supplier. This renders it impossible for individual regions to reconcile to the FMS as payments represent invoices paid by different Regional Offices.
4
SYSTEMS RECONCILIATIONS(contd)

AGs findings Managements response
The Department accepts that one of the business systems (PMIS) is sometimes not used to process all property holding costs and Management is currently addressing this problem.However , it is also true that not all property related costs need to be captured as a particular category of payments in the form of gardening and cleaning are deliberately not captured onto PMIS by the reason that they cannot be properly matched to each property.
5
WCS, PMIS AND PERSAL

AGs findings Managements response
WCS The Department did not perform any reconciliation between the FMS and the WCS for the year under review and a subsequent reconciliation by this office was also not possible since the monthly balances from the WCS were not available. Furthermore, a comparison of transactions between these systems revealed a significant number of unmatched transactions, which could not be explained. PMIS The PMIS is not being used to capture all financial transactions relating to the management of state property under the departments control. The Department did not perform any reconciliation between the FMS and the PMIS for the year under review PERSAL The reconciliation between PERSAL and FMS was not properly performed. Response same as in Systems Reconciliations Response same as in Systems Reconciliations Response same as in Systems Reconciliations
6
DOCUMENT CONTROLS

AGs findings Managements response
In a number of instances, supporting documentation for significant amounts requested reconciliations were not made available and to some extend did not include all information deemed necessary to confirm the validity, accuracy and completeness of the expenditure incurred . Due to inherent system limitations, sufficient audit trails were also not always available to trace transactions to the relevant source documentation. The audit tests also revealed instances where unauthorised amendments to supporting documents and incorrect recording of transactions in the subsystems occurred without being detected by management as a result of inadequate internal control. Incomplete documents  The Department has been experiencing problems with the way the Auditor-General is selecting its audit sample. The request for source document is presented to the Department with the distribution code, Batch number and an amount only, without any other detailed information that could assist the Department to provide the source documents requested in a case where payments were consolidated in the FMS Audit Trail There were instances where the AG expected certain source documents to be attached in a batch, when in actual fact they are kept in files. This is due to the AGs misunderstanding of the Departments business process. The situation results in the Department not being able to reach the source document required. Management arranged a workshop with the AG to assist them in understanding the Depts complex business process.
7
DOCUMENT CONTROLS(contd)

AGs findings Managements response
Unauthorised Amendments It was confirmed that most of the amendments made were in respect of reducing suppliers invoice amount due to previous payments being made. The Department has issued an instruction to all the officials of the Department that all alterations should have the identification of the person who made such an alteration and reasons thereof.
8
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
AGs findings Managements response
An amount of R59 743 000 included in the amount of R178 029 000 disclosed as accounts receivable may not be recoverable. The debt write-off policy as contained in the Statement of Accounting Policies and Related Matters (Note 4), is not in line with the policy that was applicable to all national departments in terms of Treasurys Guidelines. The disclosed balance for accounts receivable is therefore regarded to be overstated by R59 743 000. The significant part of this amount relates to the expenditure incurred on behalf of client Departments, and movements in the account balances have occurred since the year ended 2001, but it is impossible to link payments to the balances as at year ended 2001 due to the inherent limitation of the Departments debtors system which does not provide accurate age analysis. Most client Departments have acknowledged their liability to the Department, and top Management has held meetings with client Departments to ensure the recovery of these funds. A revised write-off policy is now in place and all the balances that have not had any movements will be addressed in line with policy provisions. The Department believes that the significant part of the amount reported by the AG will be recoverable, but the Department is unable to link each and every payment received from the client Department to the period of the debt.

9
CONTINGENT LIABILITIES RETENTION MONIES

AGs findings Managements response
No departmental policy existed regarding the accounting for retention monies. As result, retention monies are not accounted for consistently and the audit tests revealed that this item could be materially misstated in the financial statements. The retention monies are properly accounted for in the Works Control System as the FMS is unable to account for liabilities as it is a cash base system. The payment of the retention money is made in line with the Basic Building Industry Policy. The Department will ensure that these retention monies are disclosed as contingent liabilities in the future Annual Financial Statements.
10
NON COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS AND REGULATIONS
AGs findings Managements response
The evaluation of compliance with laws and regulations for the year under review and the follow-up of the previous years report, revealed the following shortcomings BULLET 1 In terms o f section 38(1)(a) of the PFMA, the accounting officer must ensure that the department has and maintains effective, efficient and transparent systems of financial and risk management and internal control. However, as detailed in paragraph 2.2.1 above, the audit revealed significant weakness in the system of financial management and internal control. BULLET 2 In terms of section 40(1))f) of the PFMA, the accounting officer must keep full and proper records of the financial affairs of the department. For the the year under review, transactions were not all supported by authentic and verifiable source documents. BULLET 3 Section 38(1)(f) of the PFMA states that obligations must be settled within the prescribed or agreed period. The audit for the year under review revealed that payments totaling R20 266 000 were not made within the prescribed 30-day period. BULLET 1 As it has been previously explained, these inefficiencies in the systems of internal control are not deliberate but are due to the inherent limitations of the departments business systems on which the financial information is processed. BULLET 2 Due to the inherent limitations of the Departments financial information system, it has not been easy for the Department to achieve efficient recording of financial information e. 1)The Departments debtors systems cannot produce accurate age analysis and debtors statements. 2)Financial systems and business systems are not integrated. 3)Consolidation of payments in the Financial Management System (FMS) is another limitation. 4)Different cut-off dates between the business systems and the Financial Management System pose a seriour reconciliation problem. BULLET 3 The Auditor-Generals finding here is based on the invoice date rather than the date of receipt of the invoice by the Department. There were also cases where invoices were held due to disputes which were not not settled within the prescribed period.The department has introduced a date stamping of supplier invoice on receipt to determine the time during which payments could be made within the PFMA requirements.

11
NON COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS AND REGULATIONS (contd)
AGs findings Managements response
BULLET 4 The department is responsible for all property leasing on behalf of the state and should maintain proper systems of control that will ensure the prevention and detection of fruitless and wasteful expenditure. In terms of section 38(1)(q) of the PFMA, any unauthorised, irregular of fruitless and wasteful expenditure must be reported immediately. Cases of irregular of fruitless and wasteful expenditure were revealed by my audit, which were reported nor disclosed in the financial statements. BULLET 5 State Tender Board regulations require purchases exceeding R30 000 to be placed on tender. No tenders were placed for 40 of the 328 transactions tested. Works orders to the amount of R3 441 880 were broken down below this tender limit to bypass the normal control system. See also paragraph 3.6 in this regard. BULLET 4 The Department carried out a lease project in order to address all the deficiencies in the Leasing Portfolio and the project was completed in February 2002. Management has noted disclosure requirements in the annual financial statements for future action. BULLET 5 Management took appropriate disciplinary actions against all the officials who were in contravention of the State Tender Board Regulations and some of these officials are no longer with the Departments, the actions taken were acknowledged and accepted by the Auditor-Generals team during this audit.

12
NON COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS AND REGULATIONS(contd)

AGs findings Managements response
BULLET 6 In terms of section 38(1)(j) of the PFMA, the accounting officer of the department, before transferring any funds to an entity that that entity implements effective, efficient and transparent financial management and internal control systems, or, if such written assurance is not or cannot be given, render the transfer of the funds subject to conditions and remedial measures requiring the entity to establish and implement efficient and transparent financial management and internal control systems. Transfer to the value of R7 535 964 were made by the department during the year under review without obtaining such assurance. BULLET 6 These transfers were made to local municipalities which are regulated by the same Division of Revenue Act (DoRA) which imposes that good systems of internal control should be maintained, that gives an assurance that these entities have been obliged to comply with efficient and transparent financial management and internal control systems. The municipalities are also subjected to the audit of the Auditor-General, therefore no microcontrols measures need be instituted by the department as the executing authority is accountable for funds in terms of DoRA. The Department does have a programme management system, which is our monitoring mechanism to ensure that all financial procedures are complied with.
13
SAFEGUARDING OF ASSETS
AGs findings Managements response
Of the 474 A-class items tested, 64 cases indicated variances between the asset register and the items on hand and sufficient explanations could not be provided. Furthermore, at three of the five Regional Offices where this was audited, no asset register was kept for the period under review. There are some Regional Offices that do not have the network infrastructure. Management is in the process of implementing LOGIS at all its Regions.To date only Umtata Office is operating without LOGIS. Due to the severance packages that were given to government officials, there were movements of State assets which could not be accounted for. An asset register as well as physical inventory inspections are carried out to address the deficiency.

14
PERSONNEL EXPENDITURE
AGs findings Managements response
Remuneration costs for persons appointed , other than staff appointed and registered on PERSAL, have been misallocated to personnel expenditure. The result of the audit test revealed an amount disclosed as personnel expenditure is overstated, and professional and special services understated with at least this amount. Management acknowledges this misallocation. In future the Accounting Officer will request for virement of funds before they are allocated to personnel costs and adherence to procedures and policies regarding this matter will be ensured. This matter occurred due to lack of understanding of the relevant procedures that need to be complied with.

15
AUDIT OPINION
AGs findings Managements response
Disclaimer of opinion Financial audit Because of the significance of the matter discussed in paragraph 2.2.1,1 do not express an opinion on the financial statements of the Department of Public Works for the financial year ended 31 March 2001. Qualified opinion Compliance audit Based on the audit work performed, except for the matters referred to in paragraph 2.2.2, nothing has comes to my attention that causes me to believe that material non-compliance with laws and regulations, applicable to financial matters, has occurred. The Department noted the opinion. Management of the Department will make every effort to ensure that the current inherent limitations of financial information systems are addressed in order to ensure compliance with Laws and Regulations applicable to financial matters.

16
LATE SUBMISSION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND AUDIT
REPORT

AGs findings Management response
Section 40(1) of the PFMA requires financial statements to be submitted to the Auditor-General within two months after the end of the financial year. The original set of financial statements were signed by the accounting officer and submitted for audit purposes on 17 July 2001. However, these financial statements required material changes for them to be auditable and they were returned to the department for corrections. The corrected financial statements were re-signed by the accounting officer and submitted for auditing on 14 September 2001. This date is thus recognised as the submission sate of the statements and is considered to be a late submission and technically a non-compliance with the requirements of the PFMA. The late submission of the Departments Annual Financial Statements was due to the fact that the Department did not receive the financial reporting framework in time, in order to produce the annual financial statements in accordance with its provisions as this was the first year to comply with newly developed reporting framework.
17
LATE SUBMISSION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND AUDIT
REPORT(contd)

AGs findings Managements response
Furthermore, section 40(2) of the PFMA requires the Auditor-General to audit the financial statements and submit an audit report on those statements within two months of receipt of the statements. Subsequent to the completion of the audit on the resubmitted statements of 14 September 2001, management expressed concern about the non-availability of supporting documentation. Further supporting documentation and management representations were thereafter received and audited until 8 April 2002. The department was thus unable to to comply with this requirement of the PFMA and to submit an audit report to the accounting officer on a timely basis.
18
MANAGEMENT OF STATE OWNED FIXED ASSETS
AGs findings Managements response
(a) The following are examples of control weaknesses identified during the audits (i) High level computer information system overview of the general controls environment of the Debtors system The service level agreement (SLA) between the Department of Housing and the provider of system maintenance and support had not been revised or renewed after it expired on 31 March The Department depended heavily on the expertise of key users and information technology (IT) personnel for the maintenance and support of the system. The risk therefore existed that should the above-mentioned personnel not be available for a period of time, the department would experience problems in maintaining its business operations. Management is in the process of addressing the inefficiencies and inherent limitations of these systems.

19
MANAGEMENT OF STATE OWNED FIXED ASSETS(contd)
AGs findings Managements response
The programmers had access to the production environment to transfer programs to the production environment after changes had been tested. The programmers could also make changes to the data in the live environment. Access to the production environment was not restricted to enforce adequate segregation of duties between the IT and user functions and reliance could therefore not be placed on the data integrity. Although a disaster recovery plan had been deployed at the State Information Technology Agency (SITA) and a recovery site was available, a contingency plan had not yet been established by the department to ensure that the system would be recovered satisfactorily in the event of a disaster.

20
APPLICATION CONTROLS
AGs findings Managements response
WCS A lack of adequate user controls existed to ensure that project documentation was accurate, complete, adequately authorised and kept on the project files. There was also no evidence that the project costs processed on the WCS and on the FMS had been reconciled Furthermore, a lack of computerised controls to prevent the acceptance and processing of duplicate transactions on the WCS and lack of controls to prevent the programmes access to the production environment, were identified. Management is in the process of addressing the inefficiencies and inherent limitations of these systems.

21
APPLICATION CONTROLS(contd)
AGs findings Managements response
PMIS A lack of adequate user control was identified to ensure the complete and accurate record keeping of state-owned and leased property. Several cases were revealed where property details were not captured and in other instances these details were captured more than once on the PMIS. A firm was contracted in at cost of R56,8 million to co-ordinate and manage the updating and cleaning of the PMIS data. However, data on the invoice file, the property file and the sold property file was at the time of the audit still incorrect. The preliminary results of a separate audit of the National Register of State-owned fixed assets revealed concerns with regard to the accuracy, validity and completeness of the information contained in that register. However, the audit is still in progress and the final results will be reported on in a separate report in due course. Management is in the process of addressing the inefficiencies and inherent limitations of these systems.

22
INTERNAL AUDIT FUNCTION
AGs findings Managements response
The department's internal audit function commenced with its activates during the year under review in terms of a co-sourcing agreement involving the in-house capacity and the support of a consortium of external audit firms. Internal Audit is currently busy determining whether the key performance objectives of each of the various divisions of the department is aligned with the departments overall strategic objectives. The next stage of the internal audit programme is to determine the adequacy of the internal controls put in place to prevent, detect and correct misstatements in the financial statements. Because internal audit had not performed audits prior to my audit for the 2000/01 financial year, no reliance could be placed on the work of the internal audit. However, the work performed on systems descriptions prepared by Internal Audit was used for my audit process. The statement of the Auditor-General seems to be contradictory since they have acknowledged the use of the systems descriptions developed by Internal Audit and that to the department qualifies for a reliance. Internal Audit also conducted unit risk assessment and control strategy assessment in the Regional Offices, using the Business Approach to Internal Auditing.

23
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
AGs findings Managements response
The budget of R3 521 587 000 for the 2001-02 financial year has not been allocated to posting level items to enable proper control over the expenditure per item. This state of affairs has a direct effect on proper control and disclosure in the financial statements, and on public accountability as a whole. These allocations were made outside the FMS using Excel spreadsheets to enable the capturing of commitments and liabilities as the FMS is a cash base system and cannot process liabilities.However, the findings of the AG as well as the recommendations will be followed in future.

24
RESOLUTIONS BY THE STANDING COMMITTEEE ON PUBLIC
ACCOUNTS
AGs findings Managements response
DEBTORS The Committee's recommendation that, in addition to the statistics on the success rate of the tracing agents which the accounting officer has undertaken to submit to the Committee, the age analysis of the departments current debtors, as well as brief information on the plans and targets to bring down the outstanding debts must also be submitted. PROVISIONING ADMINISTRATION The Committees recommendation that the Accounting Officer provides details on the manner in which A-class accountable items will be accounted for in future, given the reported approval of a red line approach received from the former Department of State Expenditure in this regard. The Department is moving to a new debtors system, which is a module within the PMIS, that will be able to address the previous shortcomings. All class A accountable items were accounted for at all the Regional Offices, where LOGIS has been implemented I.e. Head Office, Johannesburg, Bloemfontein, Kimberley and Port Elizabeth.

25
RESOLUTIONS BY THE STANDING COMMITTEEE ON PUBLIC
ACCOUNTS(contd)
AGs findings Management response
TRANSFORMATION PROCESS The Committee's recommendation that the department Ensure that the programme of transformation and decentralisation be accompanied by the necessary training of staff members and filling of vacant posts with a view to ensuring skilled staff at all levels, but especially at middle management level, to not only fulfill line functions, but also to support financial control functions and Furnish the Committee with details of its strategic training plan, containing target dates, measurable objectives and evaluation methods The recommendation has been noted by Management.

26
RESOLUTIONS BY THE STANDING COMMITTEEE ON PUBLIC
ACCOUNTS(contd)
AGs findings Managements response
ALLEGED IRREGULARITIES An investigation by the Directorate Fraud Awareness and Special Investigations has resulted in internal disciplinary action against 11 officials have been found guilty on several charges of misconduct and have also been dismissed. Criminal charges were laid against four officials. Furthermore, a forensic audit in the Durban Regional Offices deserves special mentioning. This corruption busting exercise in conjunction with the Forensic Component of my Office delivered the following results Several officials have been identified as being involved in various irregularities. Criminal charges were laid against two officials and six contractors. Civil action is in process against contractors and one officials. Noted Noted
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