Skip to main content
Skip to list of reports Filters

Date Range

Report Type

Any Recommendations

Any Open Recommendations

Reports

Search reports, investigative results, and agency plansShowing 51 - 60 of 332 results
Department of Labor OIG

ETA Did Not Provide Adequate Oversight of Emergency Administrative Grants

Department of the Treasury OIG

Desk Review of the State of Tennessee’s Use of Coronavirus Relief Fund Proceeds

Small Business Administration OIG

SBA’s Awards for Staffing Support for COVID-19 Economic Relief Loan Programs

We reviewed the U.S. Small Business Administration’s (SBA) blanket purchase agreement with Highlight Technologies, LLC for loan support services. To meet the increased demand for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) loan program support services, SBA issued labor hour contracts, e.g. call orders, using an existing blanket purchase agreement. However, SBA contracting officials did not always perform adequate price analyses, awarding contracts that were not the best use of taxpayer funds. SBA did not establish adequate guidance to ensure contracting officials consistently followed federal...
Securities and Exchange Commission OIG

The SEC Took Appropriate Workplace Safety Actions in Accordance With Pandemic Guidance But Could Improve Communications, Report No. 579

The SEC Took Appropriate Workplace Safety Actions in Accordance With Pandemic Guidance But Could Improve Communications, Report No. 579
Department of the Treasury OIG

Desk Review of Pleasant Point Indian Reservation, Maine’s Use of Coronavirus Relief Fund Proceeds

Department of the Treasury OIG

Desk Review of State of Texas’ Use of Coronavirus Relief Fund Proceeds

Department of the Treasury OIG

Desk Review of Phoenix, Arizona’s Use of Coronavirus Relief Fund Proceeds

Department of Health & Human Services OIG

Although IHS Allocated COVID-19 Testing Funds To Meet Community Needs, It Did Not Ensure That the Funds Were Always Used in Accordance With Federal Requirements

Department of Homeland Security OIG

FEMA Did Not Effectively Manage the Distribution of COVID-19 Medical Supplies and Equipment

Although the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) worked with its strategic partners to deliver critical medical supplies and equipment in response to COVID-19, FEMA did not effectively manage the distribution process. Specifically, FEMA did not use the Logistics Supply Chain Management System (LSCMS), its system of record for managing the distribution process, to track about 30 percent of the critical medical resources shipped, as required.
Department of the Treasury OIG

Desk Review of City of Dallas, Texas’s Use of Coronavirus Relief Fund Proceeds