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 REPORT DIGEST   
  DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN
  AND FAMILY SERVICES 
    FINANCIAL AUDIT and COMPLIANCE EXAMINATION For the Year Ended: June 30, 2006   Summary of Findings: Total this audit 12 Total last audit 14 Repeated from last audit 10   Release Date: April 12, 2007 
 
 State of Illinois Office of the Auditor General WILLIAM G. HOLLAND AUDITOR GENERAL   To obtain a copy of the
  Report contact: Office of the Auditor
  General Iles Park Plaza 740 E. Ash Street Springfield, IL 62703 (217) 782-6046 or TTY (888) 261-2887   This Report Digest and the
  Full Report are available on the worldwide web at |       SYNOPSIS      ¨ Child welfare and foster care files lacked complete and timely prepared documentation.   ¨ The Department's child abuse investigations did not always fully comply with State law. For instance, the Department:   - Did not always determine whether reports of child abuse and neglect were "unfounded" or "indicated" within 60 days.   - Failed to initiate some investigations of child abuse and neglect within 24 hours of receipt.   ¨ All contracts were not reviewed and signed prior to the beginning of the contract period.   ¨ All overtime worked was not evidenced by proper prior approval.   ¨ Annual employee performance evaluations were not completed timely.   ¨ Contracts with residential and group home service providers did not all include measurable criteria necessary to ensure desired results are achieved.   | 
                              
FINANCIAL
AUDIT AND COMPLIANCE EXAMINATION
                                                    For
The Year Ended June 30, 2006
 
| 
  EXPENDITURE STATISTICS | 
  FY 2006 | 
  FY 2005 | 
| 
  ·        
  
  Total Expenditures (All Funds)...................    | 
  $1,241,370,236 | 
  $1,237,548,070 | 
| 
       OPERATIONS
  TOTAL.................................  
           % of Total Expenditures........................  | 
  $260,258,215 
  21% | 
  $249,262,539 
  20% | 
| 
            Personal
  Services...................................  
              % of
  Operations Expenditures...........  
              Average No. of Employees...............  | 
  $178,064,339 
  68% 
  3,224 | 
  $177,684,580 
  71% 
  3,353 | 
| 
           Other Payroll Costs (FICA, 
            Retirement)....................................................  
              % of Operations Expenditures...........  | 
    
  $28,485,774 
  11% | 
    
  $41,287,036 
  17% | 
| 
           Contractual Services...............................  
              % of Operations Expenditures...........  | 
  $33,740,238 
  13% | 
  $11,221,029 
  4% | 
| 
           All Other Operations Items.....................  
              % of
  Operations Expenditures......................  | 
  $19,967,864 
  8% | 
  $19,069,894 
  8% | 
| 
       LUMP SUM
  AND OTHER PURPOSES TOTAL..........................................................  
           % of Total Expenditures.............................  | 
    
  $47,211,080 
  4% | 
    
  $51,986,414 
  4% | 
| 
       AWARDS AND
  GRANTS TOTAL................  
           % of Total Expenditures........................  | 
  $933,900,941 
  75% | 
  $936,299,117 
  76% | 
| 
  ·        
  
  Cost of Property and Equipment 
  (unaudited).  | 
  $30,997,000 | 
  $33,722,000 | 
 
| 
  SELECTED ACTIVITY
  MEASURES (unaudited) | 
  FY 2006 | 
  FY 2005 | 
| 
  ·        
  
  Hotline Calls........................................................  | 
  257,481 | 
  249,764 | 
| 
  ·        
  
  Children served in- 
       -     Regular foster care..........................................  -         
  
  Specialized foster care.....................................  -         
  
  Relative care...................................................  -         
  
  Residential placements.....................................  -         
  
  Independent living............................................  | 
    
  5,499 
  3,453 
  6,182 
  1,357 
  916 | 
    
  6,104 
  3,315 
  6,553 
  1,374 
  878 | 
| 
  ·        
  
  Finalized adoptions...............................................  | 
  1,670 | 
  1,867 | 
 
| 
  AGENCY DIRECTOR | 
| 
       During Audit Period:  Mr. Bryan Samuels 
       Currently:  Mr. Erwin McEwen, Acting (eff. 11-17-06) | 
 
| 
                     
 Child case files
  incomplete and not timely prepared                                                           All child abuse and
  neglect determinations not timely completed                   Historical Analysis                                                 All child abuse and
  neglect reports not investigated timely               Historical Analysis                                                   Contracts signed
  after beginning of contract period                                           
   Overtime approvals
  missing, incomplete, or late                                                               
 Performance
  evaluations late                                                 
  
   Additional contract
  provisions needed                                                                                                                                                                               
   
 | FINDINGS, CONCLUSIONS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS 
 INCOMPLETE AND UNTIMELY CHILD WELFARE AND FOSTER CARE FILES         The Department’s Child Welfare and Foster
  Care files lacked required documentation and not all case procedures were performed
  timely.  During our review of 60 case
  files, we noted:   -        
  4
  administrative case reviews (ACRs) were not performed. -        
  16 ACR
  notifications were not sent. -        
  3 health
  summaries were not in the file. -        
  7 education
  and development summaries were not in the file. -        
  32 medical
  and dental consent forms were not in the file or were outdated. -        
  9 placement
  and payment authorization forms did not contain all required documentation or
  were not in the file. -        
  26 files did
  not contain current photographs of the child. -        
  34 files did
  not contain fingerprints of the child. -        
  21 files did
  not contain required permanency hearing information. -        
  40 permanency
  planning checklists were not in the file. -        
  4 case entry
  forms were not in the file. -        
  7 child
  summary forms were not in the file. -        
  2 children
  absent from placement forms were not in the file. -        
  15 case
  review forms were not in the file. -        
  27 initial
  placement checklist forms were not in the file.   The Department’s Administrative Procedures
  prescribe deadlines and documentation requirements for file maintenance.  The failure to follow established
  Department procedures could result in inadequate care, unauthorized services
  or misuse of State funds.  (Finding 1,
  pages 11-14)  This finding was first reported in 1998.     Department
  officials stated they will continue to stress the importance of adequate and
  timely documentation for the placement files.  (For the previous agency response, see Digest Footnote #1.)   OVERDUE CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT DETERMINATIONS   Reports of child abuse and neglect were not always determined within 60 days as required by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. The Act states the Department shall determine, within 60 days, whether a report is "unfounded" or "indicated" and provides that the Department may extend the period up to an additional 30 days for good cause. Department statistics indicate the following noncompliance:   Total                  Reports         Determinations           Percent of Fiscal Requiring Not Determinations  Year    Determinations  In Compliance      Not In Compliance 2006 66,593 1,060 1.59% 2005 66,550 1,140 1.71% 2004 62,069 1,294 2.08% 2003 58,956 952 1.61% 2002 59,080 492 0.83% 2001 59,003 226 0.38% 2000 61,787 187 0.30% 1999 62,054 1,502 2.42% 1998 65,877 2,125 3.23%   Failure to make a determination of a report within 60 days is a violation of the Act, could delay the implementation of a service plan, and could result in further endangerment of the child. (Finding 2, pages 15-16) This finding was first reported in 1998.   We recommended the Department determine reports of child abuse or neglect within 60 days as mandated by State law.   Department officials stated they will continue in their efforts to be within 100% compliance of the timeframes set forth in the Act. (For the previous agency response, see Digest Footnote #2.)     NEED TO INITIATE INVESTIGATIONS WITHIN 24 HOURS OF RECEIPT   The Department did not initiate an investigation of every child abuse and neglect case within 24 hours of receipt of the report as required by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. Department statistics indicate the following noncompliance:   Investigations Percent of Fiscal Total Not Investigations Year Investigations In Compliance Not In Compliance 2006 66,918 154 0.23% 2005 66,793 260 0.39% 2004 62,311 268 0.43% 2003 59,397 220 0.37% 2002 59,241 517 0.87% 2001 60,054 141 0.23% 2000 61,787 219 0.35% 1999 62,618 250 0.40% 1998 65,862 461 0.70%   Failure to respond to a report of abuse or neglect within 24 hours is a violation of the Act and could result in further endangerment of the child. (Finding 3, page 17) This finding was first reported in 1998.   We recommended the Department continue to strive to initiate investigations of all child abuse and neglect reports within 24 hours of receiving the report as mandated by State law.   Department officials agreed with the recommendation and stated they will continue to make efforts to be within 100% compliance of the timeframes established. They plan to explore corrective action for employees who fail to comply with the Act. (For the previous agency response, see Digest Footnote #3.)   UNTIMELY APPROVAL OF
  CONTRACTS         The Department did not have an adequate system in place to
  ensure that contracts are reviewed and signed on a timely basis.  During our review of 20 contracts, we
  noted that 16 contracts, totaling $40,967,627, were signed after the
  beginning of the contract period.  All
  contracts must be approved prior to services being performed in accordance
  with Statewide Accounting Management System procedures.  Failure to obtain signed contracts before
  the beginning of the contract period does not bind the contractor to comply
  with applicable laws, regulations, and rules and may result in improper and
  unauthorized payments.  (Finding 5,
  page 19).  This finding was first
  reported in 2002.   We recommended the Department approve and sign all contracts before the beginning of the contract period.   Department officials agreed and stated they will continue to improve processes that ensure all contracts are approved and signed before the beginning of the contract period. They provided statistics showing improvement in Fiscal Year 2006. (For the previous agency response, see Digest Footnote #4.)     EMPLOYEES
  WORKED OVERTIME WITHOUT PROPER PRIOR APPROVAL   Department employees worked overtime without proper prior approval. Department policy requires supervisory approval of overtime before it is worked. We selected a sample of 32 employees and reviewed each person’s overtime during May 2006. Overtime was incurred on 28 days for those employees. We noted:   - overtime approval was not documented for 2 days, - overtime approval forms for 8 days were signed from 1 to 65 days after it was worked, - an overtime approval form for 1 day was signed, but not dated, - overtime incurred on a call-back basis for 10 days had inadequate approval documentation, and - overtime incurred on a call-back basis for 3 days was approved from 47 to 49 days after it was worked.   Failure to
  obtain proper prior approval for overtime may result in an employee being
  compensated for overtime not actually performed or warranted.  During fiscal year 2006, $3,354,286 was
  paid to 1,884 employees for overtime. 
  (Finding 7, pages 21-22)  This
  finding was first reported in 2002.   We recommended the Department strictly enforce its policies and procedures in regards to timekeeping and overtime.   Department officials agreed and stated they will remind supervisors to review, approve, and date requests for overtime timely as required. (For the previous agency response, see Digest Footnote #5.)   EMPLOYEE EVALUATIONS NOT TIMELY  Annual employee performance evaluations were not completed on a timely basis. In our sample of 32 employees, we noted 15 performance evaluations performed during FY 06 were from 11 to 198 days late, and 12 employees did not receive an evaluation during the current year.   The Illinois Administrative Code states that performance evaluations should be considered when determining salary increases, promotions, layoffs, discipline, and other changes in an employee’s status. The Department has an internal policy requiring evaluations on at least an annual basis. Delays in completing performance evaluations cause the payroll department to manually calculate lump sum salary adjustments. Manual calculations are not only time consuming but are also more prone to errors. (Finding 9, page 24) This finding was first reported in 2005.   We recommended the Department strictly enforce the existing policies regarding timely completion of performance evaluations.   Department officials agreed and indicated steps will be taken to streamline the evaluation process. (For the previous agency response, see Digest Footnote #6.)   INADEQUATE CONTRACT PROVISIONS  The Department’s contracts with residential and group home service providers did not all include measurable criteria necessary to ensure desired results are achieved. In a sample of 12 such contracts we noted that 4 did not include specific, measurable criteria within the contract. The Department created the Residential Performance Monitoring Unit (RPMU) to conduct on-site monitoring of the facilities that provide treatment for children. Any deficiencies identified in the site visits are communicated to the Department’s Division of Placement and Permanency which either directs the RPMU to increase the monitoring of the deficient provider or program consultants are utilized.   Department officials stated that they are in the process of modifying residential care contracts to include monitoring and participation requirements that were recommended by the RPMU. The absence or insufficiency of these contract requirements could lead to disputes with providers and impede the Department’s ability to effectively monitor programs. (Finding 10, pages 25-26) This finding was first reported in 2003.   We recommended the Department continue in its efforts to develop and include measurable criteria and participation requirements in its contracts with residential and group home service providers.   Department officials agreed with our recommendation. (For the previous agency response, see Digest Footnote #7.)     OTHER FINDINGS  The remaining findings are reportedly being given attention by the Department. We will review progress toward the implementation of our recommendations during the next examination.   
     AUDITORS’ OPINION  Our auditors stated the Department's June 30, 2006 financial statements are fairly presented in all material respects.         ____________________________________ WILLIAM G. HOLLAND, Auditor General   WGH:KMA:pp     SPECIAL ASSISTANT AUDITORS
 Our special assistant auditors were Sleeper, Disbrow, Morrison, Tarro & Lively, LLC.       DIGEST
  FOOTNOTES   #1:  INCOMPLETE AND UNTIMELY CHILD WELFARE AND FOSTER CARE FILES -
  Previous Agency Response 
 The Department agrees and will continue to stress
  the importance of adequate and timely documentation for the placement cases
  identified by the auditor’s findings as well as for all child and family
  cases.   #2:  OVERDUE CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT DETERMINATIONS - Previous
  Agency Response 
 The Department agrees and will continue to make
  diligent efforts to be within 100% compliance of the timeframes set forth in
  ANCRA for making final determinations.   #3:  NEED TO INITIATE INVESTIGATIONS WITHIN 24 HOURS OF RECEIPT -
  Previous Agency Response 
 The Department agrees with the recommendation and
  plans to explore corrective action for employees who fail to initiate
  investigations within the 24-hour timeframe.   #4:  UNTIMELY APPROVAL OF CONTRACTS - Previous Agency Response 
 The Department agrees and will continue to improve
  processes that ensure that all contracts are approved and signed before the
  beginning of the contract period.  In
  FY 06, our revised procedures, which included completion of the required
  Procurement Business Cases, resulted in 1,031 contracts being mailed to
  providers prior to July 1, an increase of 532 from FY 05.  Comparison of the number of contracts
  returned and processed also shows improvement, as follows:   Contracts Processed                                    FY 06                      FY 05 Prior to July 1                                                  196                              0 Within 30 days of July 1                              
  879                          577 Within 60 days of July 1                              
  421                          642 Within 90 days of July 1                              
  189                          398   #5:  EMPLOYEES WORKED OVERTIME WITHOUT PROPER PRIOR APPROVAL -
  Previous Agency Response 
 The Department agrees that no employee should be
  compensated for overtime unless it was worked and authorized.  We will work to remind supervisors to
  review, approve, and date requests for overtime timely in accordance with
  Department procedure and/or supplemental labor agreements.   #6:  EMPLOYEE EVALUATIONS NOT TIMELY  - Previous Agency Response 
 The Department agrees that performance evaluations
  should be completed timely.  With the
  recent (December 2005) announcement of pay raises, an intense effort has been
  undertaken to see that all evaluations are brought up to date.   #7:  INADEQUATE CONTRACT PROVISIONS – Previous Agency Response   The Department plans to continue its efforts to include measurable criteria and participation requirements in all its contracts with residential and group homes service providers. We expect that the finalization of these efforts will be completed in the later part of 2006. |