Lawmakers Discuss Bill That Would Bring Changes To Legislative Auditor’s Office

On this episode of The Legislature Today, the Legislative Auditor is a department under the West Virginia Legislature tasked with auditing offices under the executive branch. There is a bill making its way through the legislature that some say will “defang” the work done by the department while others say the bill strengthens it.

On this episode of The Legislature Today, the Legislative Auditor is a department under the West Virginia Legislature tasked with auditing offices under the executive branch. There is a bill making its way through the legislature that some say will “defang” the work done by the department while others say the bill strengthens it.

Randy Yohe spoke with House Speaker Roger Hanshaw, R-Clay, and Democratic Party Chairman Del. Mike Pushkin, D-Kanawha, for perspective on the issue.

In the House, a wide range of bills on third reading included a change in oil and gas property taxes, the sale of raw milk and changing the title of the curator of the Department of Arts, Culture and History. Randy Yohe has more.

In the Senate, the chamber approved 10 bills on third reading covering topics ranging from creating a state Alzheimer’s task force to the James A. Manchin Environmental Action Plan. Briana Heaney has more.

Finally, a group that spends a lot of time at the legislature campaigning for Second Amendment issues was back. Bob Brunner spoke to a representative to find out what they were working on now.

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The Legislature Today is West Virginia’s only television/radio simulcast devoted to covering the state’s 60-day regular legislative session.

Watch or listen to new episodes Monday through Friday at 6 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Some State Agencies Behind By Months And Millions In Vendor Payments

Auditor records show that in 2022, the DOH had more than $1 billion in invoiced work. The agency took more than 90 days to pay more than $50 million of those invoices – it took more than a year to pay $2.5 million.

State agencies work with hundreds of independent vendors and contractors. Those vendors submit invoices for payment of work or services performed. 

Recently state lawmakers learned that some agencies pay more quickly than others, what they owe, and how that adversely affects private businesses and a taxpayer funded government. . 

The State Auditor’s Office is the payment processor for the state. In recent testimony before the interim legislative Joint Committee on Finance, Deputy State Auditor Anthony Woods spoke about issues involving state agencies that experience delays in paying state vendors. The session contrasted finances with the Division of Highways and The Department of Health and Human resources.

Auditor records show that in 2022, the DOH had more than $1 billion in invoiced work. The agency took more than 90 days to pay more than $50 million of those invoices – it took more than a year to pay $2.5 million. Woods said the DOH has greatly improved making timely payments after working with an auditor’s team on efficient invoice processing.

“Say we know that these payments have been sitting out there a while,” Woods said. “We can move that ahead of all the other payments in line. Typically, we process payments on a first in, first out basis. But when there are delayed invoices or things that are urgent and priority, we can bump those to the front.”

Bryan Hoylman is president and CEO of Associated Builders and Contractors of West Virginia. Hoylman said his 200 or so commercial and industrial construction company members do a sizable amount of work with the state of West Virginia, especially with the DOH. He said the more than $200 million in DOH invoices paid after 45 days hurts a company’s bottom line.

“When you perform a job and six months, eight months go by and you’re owed a half a million dollars and you’re working on additional projects, cash flow can become a very serious issue,’ Hoylman said. “Issues that have caused a number of problems where you have to lean on lines of credit. It’s just very frustrating when it’s the state that is letting the projects. These are taxpayer funds.”

Woods told the committee the Auditor’s office gets a lot of vendor invoice contact concerning the Department of Health and Human Resources.

The Auditor’s records show in 2022, DHHR had more than $857 million in invoiced work or services performed and more than $187 million was paid in more than 90 days’ time. Woods said DHHR has a lot of steps in the invoice payment process.

“At DOH there might be two or three folks who need to review that invoice and sign off on it but DHHR has more decentralization in some areas, particularly their finance functions,” Woods said.

Woods was asked by Senate Finance Committee Chair Eric Tarr, a Republican from Putnam County, about the scope of DHHR delinquent payments. He began by contrasting with DOH.

“If I recall, when we were working on some of this for the Prompt Pay Act, they (DHHR) had about 3,000 or 4000 invoices during this same time frame that were paid greater than a year,” Woods said. 

In a response statement, DHHR said it understands the problem and hardships caused. 

“The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) understands the importance of paying invoices timely and the hardship delayed payments can cause for entities relying upon payments to fund operational costs,” the statement reads. “DHHR is committed to streamlining processes where possible while maintaining accountability.  Delays can result from many factors, such as delayed receipt of funding, delayed receipt of invoices, requests for needed corrections by vendors, and requests for supplemental documentation to ensure compliance with State of West Virginia invoicing policies.  While the number of invoices noted is significant, it represents 3% of the invoices for that time period.  According to the data for that time period, 80% of invoices received were paid within 90 days.”

State Auditor J.B. McCuskey said his office has streamlined a large portion of invoice processing, with a turnaround time of about three business days. McCuskey said when invoices aren’t received in a timely manner, like those from DHHR, the public suffers.  

“It keeps the money that is owed to West Virginia businesses, small businesses, and vendors in the hands of the government, as opposed to into the hands of businesses and nonprofits,” McCuskey said. “Companies who would either redeploy that capital in growing their business and paying their employees or doing the very important work that our various nonprofits do on behalf of the state and for the state taxpayers.”

McCuskey said non-profit vendors are jeopardized by late state agency payments. 

“Many are grant agencies, so they are granted this money,” he said. “However, they’re paid in reimbursements. They have to manage their cash flow based on how frequently the state government can pay them. And very frequently, they are forced to open lines of credit to ensure their operating revenue. And those lines of credit aren’t free.”

During the recently ended legislative session, the Auditor’s office put forward a bill that would penalize agencies that were slow to pay their invoices. Senate Bill 436, the Prompt Payment Act of 2023, died in the House Finance Committee. The bill would impose interest to agencies 45 days from the submission by vendors of proper invoices. The interest would be paid from the agency to the vendor, with the goal of getting agencies to process their invoices faster. Hoylman said bill passage would have made a big difference.

“It would allow our contractors to know that we’re going to have payment in a designated time frame based on the statute,” Hoylman said. “If not, there would be at least some interest to offset the issues that are caused by having hundreds of thousands of dollars in certain cases, lay out there for six, eight months, sometimes over a year.”

Woods said the auditor’s office is working with numerous vendors, stakeholders and state agencies to identify process improvements.

Senate Finance Investigates Governor’s Donation To Marshall For New Baseball Stadium

The Senate Finance Committee wants to know how $10 million in CARES money ended up being donated by Gov. Jim Justice’s administration to Marshall University for its new baseball stadium. 

The Senate Finance Committee wants to know how $10 million in CARES money ended up being donated by Gov. Jim Justice’s administration to Marshall University for its new baseball stadium. 

The money was donated to the university from the governor’s Gifts, Grants and Donations Fund, and was transferred into that account days before the federal deadline to spend CARES funds.

Senate Finance Chair Sen. Eric Tarr, R-Putnam, questioned why a total of $28 million of CARES money was transferred to the gifts account in the first place, given the qualifying expense for the money was listed as the Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation. 

“I understand that we still have National Guard in our corrections facilities and we have 1,000 FTEs [full-time employees] unfilled in our corrections facilities and we have a request for a $200 million deferred maintenance to go to corrections,” Tarr said. 

“We’re under that state of emergency right now, and when you transfer the last $28 million, which doesn’t come close to covering any of those corrections expenses, the governor decides to put it into a discretionary account and then start putting AstroTurf on baseball fields. I want to ask you what part of that is appropriate,” Tarr said to Berkeley Bentley, general counsel to Justice.

Bentley told the committee that as special federal revenue, the money could only be transferred into a special revenue account.

“When the state reimburses itself, there is no direction under federal law or state law that directs where that money goes. It could not go into the governor’s civil contingent fund, rather it had to go to a special revenue account, and the most likely candidate was the gifts and grants fund,” Bentley replied.

“And ultimately a baseball field,” Tarr said.

Earlier this week, the Senate Finance Committee heard directly from the Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation about their $200 million deferred maintenance costs, including at least $27 million worth of locks that need to be replaced across the system.

Bentley told the committee that the transfer was made to officially spend the CARES money by the Sept. 30 deadline, and avoid returning the money to the federal government. Once the qualifying expense was paid, he said the state can use those funds for any legal purpose. 

“We spent $1.25 billion. We did that, and we transferred it out. It’s no longer CARES, but the money is still available for any lawful purpose,” Bentley said. “The money was transferred over to pay the invoices we hadn’t received yet, not timely, what have you, but it’s also available for any other purpose that is legal under state law, no longer subject to the CARES Act requirements.”

Tarr also called on State Auditor JB McCuskey to discuss the process around the fund transfer. Under questioning from Tarr, McCuskey categorized the requested transfer of funds as “unusual.”

“We were working with cities and counties a lot to try to make sure that they were able to obligate their funds legally to ensure that the money that was given to us was spent on things that were legal,” McCuskey said. “Our office processes thousands of transfer requests a week probably … but this was a large number. And I was unfamiliar with the fund, but prior to that request, and you know, pretty obviously the name of it, it pops out pretty quickly.”

When asked why his office approved such a large and unusual transfer request, McCuskey said the governor’s office provided detailed opinions on the legitimacy of the transfer from global accounting firm BDO and the law firm Bailey Glasser. 

“We can’t supplant our legal opinion of what their appropriations are if there’s a rational basis for them, and it was close,” McCuskey said. “We decided at the end of the day, it was better to make sure that effectuated what the governor’s office wanted, but to keep a record and an accounting of what happened and why.”

The meeting ended with the Senate Finance Committee agreeing to request more information on the COVID-19 money transfer from the Office of the Inspector General, as well as the Department of the Treasury.

Third City Official Pleads Guilty To Embezzlement

A yearlong fraud investigation into the finances of the City of Madison resulted in a third conviction for employee Kim Bannister who pleaded guilty to a felony embezzlement charge.

Bannister served as the office manager for the city. Two other employees were convicted earlier this year.

Bannister was charged by the State Auditor’s Special Prosecuting Attorney for skimming city funds, receiving extra payroll checks, and being paid for leave she was not entitled to have.

Bannister was sentenced in Boone County Circuit Court by Judge Jay Hoke. The court agreed to suspend her sentence and granted a motion for probation for a period of seven years. Bannister was ordered to pay $39,904 in restitution to the City of Madison.

In February, two of Bannister’s co-workers were sentenced for their part in this scheme. Joanna Bias and Tammy Hill both pleaded guilty to felony embezzlement charges. The two were sentenced to one to 10 years in prison and ordered to pay restitution for funds they stole, $34,973 for Bias and $39,726 for Hill.

Another case against a fourth employee, who is alleged to also be a part of this scheme, has yet to be adjudicated.

The embezzlement took place from July 2012 through March 2020 and the amount stolen from the city totaled $157,073.

“This is a small sample of the many cases the State Auditor’s Public Integrity and Fraud Unit has taken on through a partnership with county prosecutors and law enforcement agencies across the state,” Auditor J.B. McCuskey said.

The West Virginia State Auditor’s Public Integrity and Fraud Unit includes a legal director, seven fraud examiners, four investigators and three purchasing card (P-Card) fraud monitors. To report suspected fraud, call (833) WV-FRAUD, or email wvfraud@wvsao.gov. You can also file an online complaint at www.wvsao.gov.

Underused Vehicles Found in State Fleet of 3,720

West Virginia auditors say the state’s Fleet Management Office had mileage data for only half the state government’s 3,720 vehicles last year while almost half of the others were underutilized.

According to auditors, 42 percent of the cars and trucks that did have mileage data failed to meet the minimum use requirement of 1,100 miles driven monthly.

The Legislature’s Post Audit Division reports half of those were short of the minimum mileage requirement by 5,000 miles or more for the year.

The Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety, which includes state police, corrections and the West Virginia Army National Guard, had the most vehicles with 515 underused among 1,435.

Data was unavailable for those that weren’t using the office’s maintenance and management contractor.

Dark Money is Making a Difference in W.Va. Elections

Voters in 27 states will cast their ballots for state Supreme Court justices when they head to the polls in November. In West Virginia, voters made their choice for the high court in May, something new for the state this election cycle, but a study from the Brennan Center for Justice says there is something else that was noteworthy about what happened in that primary.  

Anne Li reports, researchers are looking to West Virginia to prove that outside money really can sway a race.

Credit West Virginia Attorney General’s Office, West Virginia Legislative Services
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Right, current Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, left, Delegate Doug Reynolds.

One race where outside spending is making an impact is the race for Attorney General. Republican-incumbent Patrick Morrisey is up for re-election this year after considering and ultimately passing on a bid for governor. 

Morrisey is taking on Democratic Delegate Doug Reynolds, a Huntington attorney who also owns media and construction companies. Both have been on the attack in a race that some polls show is too close to call less than two weeks from Election Day.

In another statewide race, Mary Ann Claytor is a 20-year veteran of the West Virginia Auditor’s Office and says that experience makes her the right choice for the top job.

Claytor worked with local and county governments to audit their books while working for the state, making sure everything was in line for them to receive necessary federal funds. If elected, Claytor would become the first African American to hold statewide office in West Virginia, but the race for auditor is getting far less attention than others. 

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