Bill Text: NC S144 | 2013-2014 | Regular Session | Amended

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Nonprofit Grants/Increase Accountability

Spectrum: Slight Partisan Bill (Republican 10-5)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2014-05-19 - Re-ref Com On Appropriations/Base Budget [S144 Detail]

Download: North_Carolina-2013-S144-Amended.html

GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA

SESSION 2013

S                                                                                                                                                     1

SENATE BILL 144

 

 

Short Title:        Nonprofit Grants/Increase Accountability.

(Public)

Sponsors:

Senators Hartsell (Primary Sponsor);  Apodaca, Brock, Clark, Clodfelter, Daniel; D. Davis, Goolsby, Gunn, Hise, Hunt, Jackson, McLaurin, Meredith, and Nesbitt.

Referred to:

Program Evaluation.

February 28, 2013

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED

AN ACT to improve the oversight of state grants to non‑state entities and to increase the accountability of grantees who receive state grants, AS RECOMMENDED BY THE JOINT LEGISLATIVE PROGRAM EVALUATION OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE.

The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:

SECTION 1.  G.S. 143C‑6‑23 reads as rewritten:

"§ 143C‑6‑23.  State grant funds: administration; oversight and reporting requirements.

(a)        Definitions. – The following definitions apply in this section:

(1)        "Grant" and "grant funds" means State funds disbursed as a grant by a State agency; however, the terms do not include any payment made by the Medicaid program, the State Health Plan for Teachers and State Employees, or other similar medical programs.

(2)        "Grantee" means a non‑State entity that receives State funds as a grant from a State agency but does not include any non‑State entity subject to the audit and other reporting requirements of the Local Government Commission.

(3)        "Subgrantee" means a non‑State entity that receives State funds as a grant from a grantee or from another subgrantee but does not include any non‑State entity subject to the audit and other reporting requirements of the Local Government Commission.

(b)        Conflict of Interest Policy. – Every grantee shall file with the State agency disbursing funds to the grantee a copy of that grantee's policy addressing conflicts of interest that may arise involving the grantee's management employees and the members of its board of directors or other governing body. The policy shall address situations in which any of these individuals may directly or indirectly benefit, except as the grantee's employees or members of its board or other governing body, from the grantee's disbursing of State funds, and shall include actions to be taken by the grantee or the individual, or both, to avoid conflicts of interest and the appearance of impropriety. The policy shall be filed before the disbursing State agency may disburse the grant funds.

(c)        No Overdue Tax Debts. – Every grantee shall file with the State agency or department disbursing funds to the grantee a written statement completed by that grantee's board of directors or other governing body stating that the grantee does not have any overdue tax debts, as defined by G.S. 105‑243.1, at the federal, State, or local level. The written statement shall be made under oath and shall be filed before the disbursing State agency or department may disburse the grant funds. A person who makes a false statement in violation of this subsection is guilty of a criminal offense punishable as provided by G.S. 143C‑10‑1.

(d)        Office of State Budget Rules Must Require Uniform Administration of State Grants. – The Office of State Budget and Management shall adopt rules to ensure the uniform administration of State grants by all grantor State agencies and grantees or subgrantees. The Office of State Budget and Management shall consult with the Office of the State Auditor and the Attorney General in establishing the rules required by this subsection. The rules shall establish policies and procedures for disbursements of State grants and for State agency oversight, monitoring, and evaluation of grantees and subgrantees. The policies and procedures shall:

(1)        Ensure that the purpose and reporting requirements of each grant are specified to the grantee.

(2)        Ensure that grantees specify the purpose and reporting requirements for grants made to subgrantees.

(2a)      Require each contract that awards a grant to include all of the following:

a.         Concrete, measurable benchmarks against which to measure success. The benchmarks shall address the expected quantifiable outputs and outcomes.

b.         Identification of program performance measures that will be used to compare quantifiable outputs and outcomes against the benchmarks established in contracts pursuant to this subdivision.

c.         For purposes of this subdivision, the term "output" means quantified activities performed by the grantee, and the term "outcome" means what happens as a result of the grantee's activities.

(3)        Ensure that State funds are spent in accordance with the purposes for which they were granted.

(4)        Hold the grantees and subgrantees accountable for the legal and appropriate expenditure of grant funds.

(5)        Provide for adequate oversight and monitoring to prevent the misuse of grant funds.

(5a)      Establish the criteria for grants from which oversight costs may be withheld by a State agency pursuant to subsection (f1) of this section.

(5b)      Provide procedures for the determination of the amount of a grant that may be withheld for administrative costs pursuant to subsection (f1) of this section.

(6)        Establish mandatory periodic reporting requirements for grantees and subgrantees, including methods of reporting, to provide financial and program performance information. The mandatory periodic reporting requirements shall require grantees and subgrantees to file with the State Auditor copies of reports and statements that are filed with State agencies pursuant to this subsection. Compliance with the mandatory periodic reporting requirements of this subdivision shall not require grantees and subgrantees to file with the State Auditor the information described in subsections (b) and (c) of this section.

(6a)      Establish mandatory periodic reporting requirements for grantees and subgrantees, including reporting on benchmarks set out in the contract awarding the grant pursuant to subdivision (2a) of this subsection by means of performance measures identified in the contract. Performance reporting shall be reviewed by the State agency overseeing the grant on an ongoing basis. The State agency overseeing the grant shall submit an annual performance report to the Office of State Budget and Management.

(7)        Require grantees and subgrantees to maintain reports, records, and other information to properly account for the expenditure of all grant funds and to make such reports, records, and other information available to the grantor State agency for oversight, monitoring, and evaluation purposes.

(8)        Require grantees and subgrantees to ensure that work papers in the possession of their auditors are available to the State Auditor for the purposes set out in subsection (i) of this section.

(9)        Require grantees to be responsible for managing and monitoring each project, program, or activity supported by grant funds and each subgrantee project, program, or activity supported by grant funds.

(9a)      Require a State agency that oversees a grant program to develop a monitoring plan for that program. The State agency shall provide a description of its monitoring plan and any additional information regarding that plan to the Office of State Budget and Management.

(10)      Provide procedures for the suspension of further disbursements or use of grant funds for noncompliance with these rules or other inappropriate use of the funds.

(11)      Provide procedures for use in appropriate circumstances for reinstatement of disbursements that have been suspended for noncompliance with these rules or other inappropriate use of grant funds.

(12)      Provide procedures for the recovery and return to the grantor State agency of unexpended grant funds from a grantee or subgrantee if the grantee or subgrantee is unable to fulfill the purposes of the grant.

(e)        Rules Are Subject to the Administrative Procedure Act. – Notwithstanding the provisions of G.S. 150B‑2(8a)b. rules adopted pursuant to subsection (d) of this section are subject to the provisions of Chapter 150B of the General Statutes.

(f)         Suspension and Recovery of Funds to Grant Recipients for Noncompliance. – The Office of State Budget and Management, after consultation with the administering State agency, shall have the power to suspend disbursement of grant funds to grantees or subgrantees, to prevent further use of grant funds already disbursed, and to recover grant funds already disbursed for noncompliance with rules adopted pursuant to subsection (d) of this section. In addition, the Office of the Controller shall electronically stop payments to a grantee upon notification by the Office of State Budget and Management to suspend disbursement of funds to the grantee.

If the grant funds are a pass‑through of funds granted by an agency of the United States, then the Office of State Budget and Management must consult with the granting agency of the United States and the State agency that is the recipient of the pass‑through funds prior to taking the actions authorized by this subsection.

(f1)       Withholding From Certain Grants to Cover Agency Oversight Cost. – A State agency that oversees a grant may withhold up to two percent (2%) of the amount of the grant awarded each fiscal year to cover grant oversight costs pursuant to this subsection if the grant satisfies the criteria established by the Office of State Budget and Management. No State agency shall withhold funds under this subsection until the State agency submits a written request to the Office of State Budget and Management that sets out the oversight responsibilities of the agency with regard to the grant, the amount that the agency is requesting to withhold from the grant for the fiscal year, and receives approval from the Office of State Budget and Management to withhold funds to cover the oversight costs. An agency may withhold only the amount approved by the Office of State Budget and Management. The Office of State Budget and Management shall determine whether it is appropriate to allow the withholding under this section, and if so, the amount that may be withheld by the State agency. The Office of State Budget and Management shall notify the State agency in writing of the approval or disapproval of the request, and if approved, that amount that may be withheld.

If a State agency does receive approval under this section to withhold a percentage of the amount of the grant awarded, then the agency shall reserve one‑half of one percent (.5%) of the amount authorized by the Office of State Budget and Management to be withheld by the agency and shall transfer those funds to the Office of State Budget and Management at the time the grant funds are disbursed. The Office of State Budget and Management shall use the funds transferred from the agency to cover costs related to statewide oversight of grants to non‑State entities.

Funds shall not be withheld under this subsection for the purpose of covering oversight costs if the grant is a pass‑through of funds granted by an agency of the United States and the terms of the federal grant prohibit the withholding of funds described by this subsection.

(g)        Audit Oversight. – The State Auditor has audit oversight, with respect to grant funds received by the grantee or subgrantee, pursuant to Article 5A of Chapter 147 of the General Statutes, of every grantee or subgrantee that receives, uses, or expends grant funds. A grantee or subgrantee must, upon request, furnish to the State Auditor for audit all books, records, and other information necessary for the State Auditor to account fully for the use and expenditure of grant funds received by the grantee or subgrantee. The grantee or subgrantee must furnish any additional financial or budgetary information requested by the State Auditor, including audit work papers in the possession of any auditor of a grantee or subgrantee directly related to the use and expenditure of grant funds.

(h)        Report on Grant Recipients That Failed to Comply. – Not later than May 1, 2007, and by May 1 of every succeeding year, the Office of State Budget and Management shall report to the Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations and the Fiscal Research Division on all grantees or subgrantees that failed to comply with this section with respect to grant funds received in the prior fiscal year.

(i)         State Agencies to Submit Grant List to Auditor. – No later than October 1 of each year, each State agency shall submit a list to the State Auditor, in the format prescribed by the State Auditor, of every grantee to which the agency disbursed grant funds in the prior fiscal year. The list shall include the amount disbursed to each grantee and other information as required by the State Auditor to comply with the requirements of this section."

SECTION 2.  G.S. 143C‑6‑23(d), as amended by Section 1 of this act, is amended by adding a new subdivision to read:

"(7a)     Require grantees to submit cash‑basis reporting within 90 days of the end of the State fiscal year."

SECTION 3.  Section 2 of this act becomes effective July 1, 2015. The remainder of this act becomes effective July 1, 2013.

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