Thursday, November 19, 2015

Inspector seeking more money to conduct audits of LAUSD charters - LA School Report

Inspector seeking more money to conduct audits of LAUSD charters - LA School Report:

Inspector seeking more money to conduct audits of LAUSD charters






The LA Unified’sOffice of Inspector General told a school board committee this week that it needs an additional $570,000 to audit charter schools, according to a recent report.
The OIG once had a staff of 83 and is now down to 57, according to Inspector GeneralKen Bramlett,whose office oversees a $7.6 million budget. The OIG not only checks charter schools to see if they meet safety and educational requirements but also investigates financial fraud, contracts and internal audits for the entire district. The office also looks at services, personnel, safety and test scores.
The cost for a basic audit of a charter school that could take three months to complete costs nearly $70,000 while a more complex audit that could last half a year costs nearly $150,000, according to a report Bramlett and his staff presented to the Budget, Facilities and Audit Committee this week. The number of audits that the office conducts each year has also fallen by half, to 6 from 12.
Board member Scott Schmerelson, who sits on the committee, pointed out that it doesn’t seem to make sense to have a reduction of investigators and number of audits when the numbers of LA Unified charter schools are increasing.
Committee chair Mónica Ratliff said, “I would love to give more money to the Office of Inspector General,” and she asked for a report next month that would explain how the extra money would help the staff.
LAUSD is responsible for conducting audits of charter schools before they are Inspector seeking more money to conduct audits of LAUSD charters - LA School Report: