08-005951
Workforce Escarosa, Inc. vs.
Agency For Workforce Innovation
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Friday, October 30, 2009.
Recommended Order on Friday, October 30, 2009.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8WORKFORCE ESCAROSA, INC., )
12)
13Petitioner, )
15)
16vs. ) Case No. 08-5951
21)
22AGENCY FOR WORKFORCE )
26INNOVATION, )
28)
29Respondent. )
31)
32RECOMMENDED ORDER
34Upon proper notice, this matter came on for formal
43proceeding and hearing before P. Michael Ruff, a duly-designated
52Administrative Law Judge of the Division of Administrative
60Hearings in Pensacola, Florida, on June 17 and 18, 2009. The
71appearances were as follows:
75APPEARANCES
76For Petitioner: Susan Nelms, Executive Director,
82Workforce Escarosa, Inc.
85(Qualified Representative)
879111 A Sturdevant Street
91Pensacola, Florida 32514
94Joseph Passeretti, Esquire
9730 South Spring Street
101Pensacola, Florida 32502
104For Respondent: James E. Landsberg, Esquire
110Peter James Caldwell, Esquire
114Agency for Workforce Innovation
118107 East Madison Street, MSC 110
124Tallahassee, Florida 32399-4158
127STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES
131The issues to be resolved in this proceeding concern
140whether the Agency for Workforce Innovation (the Agency),
148(Respondent), has properly disallowed some $348,355 in federal
157grant funding to the Petitioner, Workforce Escarosa, Inc.
165(Escarosa) or Petitioner, for purportedly having insufficient
172documentation to justify that such funds were used for allowable
182U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) grant
191purposes. Included within that issue is the question of whether
201the funds, related to "gas card" purchases, were properly
210documented and whether Escarosa must re-pay the disallowed
218amount.
219PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
221This cause arose on September 19, 2008, when the Respondent
231Agency issued a "Management Decision" (Initial Agency Action),
239in which it disallowed $348,355 in expenditures for gas cards
250charged by Escarosa to an HHS Temporary Assistance to Needy
260Families (TANF) Welfare Transition Program (WTP) grant. It
268advised Escarosa that the disallowed charges must be re-paid by
278December 31, 2008. The Management Decision followed an audit of
288federal funds which had been awarded to Escarosa for the year
299ending June 30, 2007. Thereafter, pursuant to an Amended
308Hearing Request, the cause was referred to the Division of
318Administrative Hearings on December 1, 2008.
324The cause was assigned to the undersigned Administrative
332Law Judge for formal proceeding. By agreement of the parties,
342the matter was initially set for hearing on March 24 and 25,
3542009. Thereafter, by an agreed-upon Motion for Continuance, the
363matter was continued and was re-scheduled for agreed upon dates
373of June 17 and 18, 2009. The cause came on for hearing on those
387dates. The Petitioner, Escarosa, presented the testimony of two
396witnesses, Susan Nelms, the Escarosa Executive Director, and
404Margeret Thomas, the former Escarosa Assistant Executive
411Director. Escarosa offered Petitioner's Exhibits 1 through 8
419into evidence and those eight exhibits were admitted.
427Additionally, upon examination and discussion between
433Susan Nelms and the undersigned, Susan Nelms, without objection,
442was granted leave to represent Escarosa as a Qualified
451Representative at the hearing.
455The Agency presented the testimony of nine witnesses; Susan
464Nelms, Diane Bagwell, Director of Social Service Grants and
473Projects for Pensacola Junior College (PJC); James Mathews,
481Agency Inspector General; Janet Summers, Escarosa Finance
488Director; Carol Bono, Escarosa Accounting Specialist; Laura
495McKinley, the Agency's Financial Management Systems Assurance
502Section Manager; Fay Malone, Agency Compensation and Benefits
510Manager; Phillip Wilcox, Agency Investigations Manager; and Ed
518LeBrun, former Escarosa Executive Director. The Respondent
525Agency also offered Respondent's Exhibits A through TT. All
534exhibits were admitted into evidence upon motion and stipulation
543of the parties.
546On June 16, 2009, the Agency served on Escarosa a request
557that the undersigned take official recognition of several
565federal regulations and administrative decisions. That request
572was filed with the Division of Administrative Hearings, no
581objection was made to the request and official recognition has
591been so taken.
594Upon conclusion of the hearing, the parties requested that
603the testimony be transcribed and availed themselves of the right
613to submit proposed recommended orders. The three-volume
620transcript was filed with the Division on July 13, 2009. After
631the hearing, upon a showing of good cause by the Agency, the
643Agency's Motion for Extension was granted, for submission of
652proposed recommended orders, until August 21, 2009. The
660Proposed Recommended Orders were thereafter timely submitted and
668have been considered in the rendition of this Recommended Order.
678FINDINGS OF FACT
6811. The Petitioner, Escarosa, is a state Regional Workforce
690Board (RWB) constituted according to Section 445.007, Florida
698Statutes (2008). 1/ Escarosa is in the business of promoting
708workforce development in the Northwest Florida region and as
717part of this effort provides support services to assist WTP
727participants. It does so, as pertinent to this case, through
737the use of TANF funds to provide transportation assistance, in
747the form of gas cards, which assist participants in engaging in
758work activities.
7602. In the Workforce Development System, federal government
768funds are transmitted to the Agency. The Agency then passes the
779funds through to regional workforce boards such as Escarosa, and
789the regional workforce boards then pass those funds, by related
799agreements, to local providers such as PJC, to provide workforce
809development programs or support services.
8143. The Agency and Escarosa operated pursuant to a "Master
824Cooperative Agreement," at times pertinent to this case. The
833agreement required Escarosa to comply with applicable cost
841principles and administrative requirements for grants included
848in various "Circulars" of the Federal Office of Management and
858Budget" (OMB).
8604. The TANF program is a state-administered program that
869assists unemployed persons returning to the workforce. It
877provides support services, such as transportation assistance
884(here in the form of gas cards) which assist participants in
895traveling to engage in work activities.
9015. In accepting TANF funds, Escarosa has agreed to the
911terms and conditions of the Grant Award. The Grant Award
921states, in pertinent part,
925expenditures utilizing these funds must be
931consistent with all federal and state rules,
938regulations and policies established for
943TANF funds. Funds must be used to
950facilitate meeting the goals and outcome
956measures of the welfare transition program.
9626. By being a recipient of federal grant funds, Escarosa
972is required to properly account for expenditures of those funds
982and to document grant expenditures. The documentation must
990establish that an expenditure is one which is allowable under
1000the laws or regulations pertaining to the grant program and that
1011the expenditure is actually used for the intended purpose of the
1022grant. Therefore, for the gas card situation, the documentation
1031must show a link between a card issued by Escarosa and a
1043participant in the WTP program and show that the card went to an
1056eligible participant.
10587. Escarosa, as a recipient of federal funds, is required
1068to maintain a financial management system that includes
1076effective internal controls and provides for safeguarding of
1084federal funds. The system should include controls to prevent
1093errors or problems in transactions and to detect when there are
1104breakdowns in the system. A monitoring plan should be part of
1115the testing or detection process.
11208. The state agency is also required to monitor sub-
1130recipients such as Escarosa. They must be monitored on a
1140regular basis to ensure that there is compliance with grant
1150rules, regulations, the provisions of specific agreements, and
1158with the performance of goals and objectives, pursuant to OMB
1168Circular A-133.
11709. The Agency monitored Escarosa during the period of time
1180relevant to this case but did not discover the problems with
1191documentation in the gas card program. The monitoring by the
1201Agency is a sampling process, not an entire audit of every
1212aspect of Escarosa's operations and programs.
121810. The Agency does not have authority to monitor or
1228investigate below the level of its sub-recipient such as
1237Escarosa. It does not audit sub-recipients' service providers,
1245such as PJC. It did check Escarosa's records to see that it had
1258been monitoring, and had audit reports, as to its service
1268provider PJC (the College). The Agency checked for the Audit
1278reports regarding the College and, for the 2004 period,
1287determined that the College had not submitted an external audit
1297report or Federal Single Audit Report, as required. It
1306recommended to Escarosa's regional workforce board that it
1314require such sub-recipients to comply with contractual terms,
1322including submission of a Federal Single Audit Report. Escarosa
1331took that suggested corrective action by the time of the 2005
1342audit and had a current External Audit Report for the College in
1354its file for 2005.
135811. Escarosa is required to have annual financial audits
1367performed in compliance with OMB Circular A-133. The audit
1376reports are required to be filed with the Agency and Escarosa
1387complied with that requirement and filed its reports.
139512. The Agency has a policy concerning audit resolution
1404which provides that regional workforce boards, such as Escarosa,
1413must re-pay debts, established as a result of inappropriate use
1423of federal funds, from non-federal funds. In its Administrative
1432Plan, Escarosa acknowledged the requirement to re-pay such
1440obligations, which are accrued as a result of mis-expenditure of
1450funds due to willful disregard of federal law, gross negligence
1460or failure to observe accepted standards of administration. The
1469Escarosa Administrative Plan includes debt collection from
1476contracted providers such as PJC, in appropriate circumstances.
1484THE GAS CARD PROGRAM
148813. Escarosa provided transportation assistance to WTP
1495participants in the form of issuance of gas cards to such
1506participants. The gas cards were purchased with HHS/TANF grant
1515funds received from the Petitioner Agency and were charged to
1525Escarosa's grant award. The value of gas card purchases between
1535June 2004 and December 2006 as reflected on invoices for gas
1546cards, totaled $991,000. Escarosa purchased approximately
155358,800 gas cards during this period in increments of $5.00,
1564$10.00, $15.00 and $20.00. As reflected on the Respondent's
1573Exhibit A, in evidence, at page 4, witness Diane Bagwell
1583reported that some 57,652 cards (including 1,544 purportedly un-
1594used cards) were issued to the College between July 1, 2004, and
1606December 15, 2006.
160914. The un-refuted evidence reflects that Escarosa had
1617written procedures which specified the process for ordering gas
1626cards, transferring custody of them to the service provider,
1635(the College); determining participant eligibility and the
1642process for issuing cards to participants. This included
1650documentation requirements and monitoring requirements.
1655Escarosa's written procedures required that it monitor, with
1663periodic reviews, the gas card disbursement system to determine
1672compliance with all written procedures. The procedure requires
1680the documentation of participant eligibility and issuance of
1688cards. This documentation was required to be filed in the
1698participant's "support services file" maintained by the College.
1706Additionally, a gas card log was maintained by the College and
1717was required to reflect the participant's signature, upon
1725receipt of a gas card. The log and the gas cards were required
1738to be monitored to ensure strict, procedural accountability.
174615. The College was a service provider for Escarosa during
1756the period in question, June 2004 to December 2006, and until
1767June 30, 2008. This was pursuant to a contract between the
1778College and Escarosa by which the College operated the gas card
1789program. The contract between Escarosa and the College required
1798the College to defend, indemnify, and hold Escarosa harmless
1807from all claims, including attorneys' fees and costs, caused by
1817the College's acts or omissions in the course of operation of
1828the contract. Escarosa's contract with the College also
1836required the College to maintain general liability insurance to
1845cover the College, and any services or activities provided by
1855the College, under its contract with Escarosa.
186216. The College did not petition to intervene in these
1872proceedings. The Respondent Agency is not a party to Escarosa's
1882contract with the College to operate the gas card program.
189217. On December 14, 2006, Escarosa notified the College of
1902certain problems in the audit and reconciliation of gas card
1912disbursements. Some of the issues included gas card signature
1921logs not being available to be audited by Escarosa;
1930inconsistencies in the dates on signature logs, such that
1939distribution dates to participants were entered as prior to the
1949date that their relevant cards had actually been purchased.
1958There were distribution dates on Saturdays when the program was
1968closed for the weekend. There were logs showing the
1977distribution date to the participant in October 2006, which were
1987submitted after the referenced gas cards had been physically
1996counted (before distribution) on November 3, 2006. There were
2005cards not issued in consecutive order and cards issued without
2015being receipted to the staff member responsible for distributing
2024the cards, so that there was no record of who had custody of the
2038cards. Some clients received excessive amounts of cards and, on
2048one signature log, the client signed a line with no gas card
2060number indicated.
206218. Escarosa notified the Respondent Agency in December
20702006, that there were cards which could not be accounted for and
2082that theft by an employee of the College was suspected. All
2093cards that could not be accounted for were issued from Escarosa
2104to the College between the dates of June 1, 2004 and
2115December 31, 2006.
211819. The Respondent's staff went to Escarosa in
2126January 2007 to provide technical assistance in resolving the
2135discovered problems with the gas card program. The Respondent
2144found that Escarosa had not been following its own procedures as
2155to monitoring and managing the program. Escarosa was not
2164monitoring the gas card distribution process or the process for
2174determining whether participants were eligible for receiving
2181cards. It was not monitoring the dollar amount of cards being
2192distributed to participants on a monthly basis. It was not
2202correctly following its Administrative Plan concerning
2208monitoring or the Master Cooperative Agreement with the Agency,
2217because it was not properly monitoring its service provider, the
2227College.
222820. Escarosa has agreed, through its representative,
2235Ms. Nelms, that with proper monitoring of the program the theft
2246of gas cards could have been detected within a few months. The
2258Agency's Office of Inspector General conducted an inquiry into
2267Escarosa's report concerning problems with the program and
2275issued a report on March 16, 2007. At that time, there had not
2288been a determination of the final amount of undocumented cards,
2298so it was recommended that Escarosa determine the amount of loss
2309and develop a plan for recovery of the loss from the College.
232121. The Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE)
2329investigated the gas card theft. It interviewed program
2337participants and asked them to authenticate signatures on the
2346client signature logs, in order to identify forged signatures.
2355It did this for about 50 participants and then suspended its
2366investigation because the total charges then established through
2374its investigation exceeded the amount necessary to charge the
2383College employee involved with grand theft. Therefore, because
2391FDLE ceased its investigation, it never established the total
2400extent of any theft or other undocumented status of additional
2410gas cards. The College employee involved was prosecuted in a
2420criminal proceeding and was ordered to pay $2,360 restitution.
2430VALUE OF UNDOCUMENTED CARDS
243422. The Escarosa staff worked with the Agency's personnel
2443in attempting to determine the number of undocumented cards. It
2453later hired temporary staff to assist in that effort.
246223. In September 2007, Ms. Nelms, of Escarosa, advised the
2472Agency's Inspector General of her belief that the amount of
2482undocumented cards at that time was $284,685. The process of
2493reconciliation was continuing and incomplete at that point,
2501however. The College had not agreed to that amount and was
2512trying to match disbursement logs for issuing the cards, the
2522documentation in its "one-stop service tracking system" (OSST)
2530and its "hard copy files," to locate additional documentation
2539which could reduce the amount of undocumented gas cards below
2549the above figure. The OSST is a data system used to store
2561information on program participants, such as their eligibility
2569for transportation services.
257224. Escarosa had the College calculate the number of
2581cards, and their value, for which there was insufficient
2590documentation, using gas card numbers provided it by Escarosa.
2599The list of card numbers provided to the College was prepared by
2611Escarosa using its financial and purchasing records. The list
2620provided contained only the cards issued to the College.
262925. The College then matched the card numbers with
2638information in its "support services files" as to eligibility
2647and card disbursement to participants. It then determined, in
2656late 2007, that it believed the final amount of undocumented gas
2667cards to be $348,355.
267226. In late 2007, the Agency Investigations Manager and an
2682auditor returned to Escarosa and accepted the College's
2690calculation that 20,899 gas cards valued at $348,355 were
2701unaccounted for and not traceable to corresponding disbursement
2709logs. A report of that confirmation was issued on January 10,
27202008 ( See Respondent's Exhibit 8 in evidence).
272827. However, disbursement logs have been shown by the
2737evidence and testimony in this proceeding, in some instances, to
2747have been inaccurately executed or forged. Even if some issued
2757cards were not reflected in disbursement logs, that still does
2767not mean that those which were reflected in disbursement logs
2777were accurately entered and documented, given the fact that
2786there was some forgery and inaccurate recording in disbursement
2795logs, concerning card disbursement. This fact calls into
2803question the valuation of $348,355. That number also is
2813rendered doubtful by the fact that, of the purported number of
2824undocumented gas cards, it has not been persuasively shown
2833whether all were actually issued and used, nor who may have used
2845all of them. Thus, while the evidence may show that 20,899 gas
2858cards were undocumented, it does not correspondingly
2865persuasively show that $348,355 is the proven amount which
2875should be disallowed and ultimately re-paid.
288128. Thus, the report issued January 10, 2008, found that
2891documentation had not been produced to support proper use of
2901grant funds concerning the undocumented cards. The Agency
2909Inspector General could not know with confidence that the gas
2919cards in question went to eligible participants in the program
2929or that the funds were actually used for the purpose for which
2941they were granted to Escarosa.
294629. Escarosa chose not to have an audit performed, as
2956requested by the Agency, to determine the exact amount
2965attributable to undocumented cards or the amount used for non-
2975approved purposes. It did not have a forensic examination of
2985the gas card logs performed, as Ms. Nelms had once advocated,
2996because Ms. Nelms did not want to spend further money in
3007investigation. Escarosa does not have any non-federal money to
3016spend on such costs.
302030. Further, in January 2008, the Agency requested that
3029Escarosa attempt to determine whether the oil companies from
3038whom the cards had been purchased could, from their records,
3048confirm and document the unused gas cards. The unused cards
3058would show that funds represented by them had not actually been
3069expended. That would reduce the number of undocumented cards
3078and result in obtaining refunds for the unused cards. This
3088would reduce the ultimate re-payment amount. The Agency
3096believed this would help Escarosa reduce the number of
3105undocumented cards that it might be responsible for. Escarosa,
3114however, did not accede to the request that it attempt to make
3126such an audit involving the oil companies.
313331. Escarosa had obtained an audit from the firm of
3143O'Sullivan and Creel, LLP, which issued its "Independent
3151Auditor's Report on Compliance with Requirements Applicable to
3159Each Major Program and Internal Control Over Compliance in
3168Accord with OMB Circular A-133." This document is in evidence
3178as Respondents Exhibit 2. This was a report of an audit of
3190Escarosa's compliance with requirements applicable to federal
3197programs and was provided to Escarosa's Board of Directors. It
3207included a finding that Escarosa had not complied with
3216requirements concerning allowable costs and sub-recipient
3222monitoring applicable to its TANF-WTP program. It included, at
3231Finding 2006-1: "Un-allowed costs and sub-recipient monitoring,"
3238that there was a final amount of questioned cost of $348,355,
3250representing the period from July 2004 through December 2006.
3259It described that amount in its finding, however, as a "Final
3270Amount of Possible Theft " of $348,355 for undocumented gas
3280cards. It also acknowledged in its findings that it had not
3291audited any response to the audit report which was made or might
3303be made by Escarosa.
330732. Escarosa later took the position, by letter of
3316January 30, 2009, that it believed all gas cards had been
3327properly documented, except for an amount valued at $5,580,
3337which Escarosa postulated had been stolen. The Agency did not
3347accept that new position, without an amended audit finding or
3357certification by an auditor, which would validate the
3365documentation as being appropriate as to the remaining $342,775
3375amount of disputed gas cards.
338033. Ms. Nelms asserted that the only way to arrive at an
3392audited number of the cards that were stolen, improperly used or
3403unaccounted-for would be to have a forensic handwriting
3411specialist analyze the signatures in the card disbursement logs.
3420She admitted that it would be better to have had a forensic
3432audit performed so that an exact amount of loss would have been
3444known. She did not obtain, nor did Escarosa obtain, such a
3455forensic audit or handwriting analysis, however.
346134. In taking a position that the undocumented amount or
3471value of the gas cards was much lower than the postulated
3482$348,355, Ms. Nelms testified that the client signature logs or
3493gas card logs should be used to reconcile gas card purchases
3504with what had been disbursed to participants. She maintained
3513that this would result in a much lower undocumented figure,
3523perhaps as low as $5,580. Escarosa presented no persuasive
3533evidence that the gas card logs were sufficiently reliable
3542however. In relying on the gas card logs to show gas card
3554disbursement to program participants, Escarosa concedes that the
3562logs contained forged and missing signatures and that portions
3571of the logs had been falsified. The logs have simply not been
3583demonstrated to be reliable as a basis of documentation for the
3594gas card expenditures at issue.
359935. Diane Bagwell was the person responsible for the
3608College's calculation concerning arriving at the figure for
3616undocumented gas cards. Ms. Bagwell testified that the
3624College's support services files, which were maintained under
3632her supervision, were maintained and updated accurately and that
3641the $348,355 figure was arrived at from data in the support
3653services files. She testified that she believed that data was
3663reliable, but she also questioned the final amount of $348,355
3674because she had a doubt concerning the list of cards provided by
3686Escarosa to the College, as well as the time period (July 2004-
3698December 2006) for which she was directed to conduct the search
3709or calculation. In its calculation, the College compared the
3718total number of gas cards purchased with HHS funds by Escarosa
3729to the number of gas cards distributed by the College. It only
3741distributes gas cards pursuant to the WTP program. It is not
3752involved in card distribution for Escarosa's Non-Custodial
3759Parent Program (NCPP). The approach used by the College in its
3770calculation, which thus far has been accepted by the Agency, is
3781flawed in that the testimony of Diane Bagwell and Janet Summers
3792indicates that NCPP gas cards may have been included in the
3803purported undocumented amount referenced above. This is because
3811the evidence indicates that the calculation by the College may
3821have compared the total cards purchased for both the WTP and
3832NCPP programs against the cards distributed by the college.
384136. It is also apparent the College did not include any
3852data from the time period prior to July 2004 nor after December
38642006. The analysis in this manner would remove from
3873consideration cards purchased prior to the beginning of the test
3883period, July 2004, but actually activated or issued after July
38932004, as well as cards purchased prior to December 2006, but
3904activated or issued after December 2006. Cards purchased prior
3913to July 2004 and distributed during January 2004 through
3922December 2006, would appear to be undocumented because the data
3932was not reviewed, even though the cards were distributed and
3942used between January 2004 and December 2006. Similarly, the
3951cards purchased prior to December 2006, but not issued and used
3962until 2007, would appear as being undocumented because the
3971attendant data was not reviewed for the period July 2004 through
3982December 2006, even though, in actuality, the cards may have
3992been properly accounted-for, but used after December 2006.
400037. It thus appears that the College, in its calculation,
4010may have combined gas card purchases made for both the NCPP and
4022the WTP programs, comparing the combined total of gas card
4032purchases to its own WTP records in its support services files.
4043It apparently did not set off the total of the number of NCPP
4056gas cards from the WTP program cards and thus considered an
4067inflated number of purchased gas cards vis-a-vis its records
4076when it should have only considered the WTP-related cards. The
4086evidence shows that NCPP cards valued in excess of $200,000 were
4098purchased. This is a relatively small percentage of the total
4108HHS funds expended on gas card purchases for the relevant time
4119period (approximately $1,000,000). However, this does account
4128for a significant portion of the so-called undocumented gas
4137cards. The number of undocumented cards might be substantially
4146smaller if the College, in its calculation, had offset or
4156removed the NCPP gas cards from the total cards it was
4167considering.
416838. Other flaws in the calculations by the College also
4178cast doubt on the correctness of the disallowment figure of
4188$348,355. Thus, for example, as to Exhibit "L", the Agency
4199contends that in the period July 2004 to December 2004, gas
4210cards issued by both CITGO and BP oil companies are
4220undocumented. Exhibit "S", however, and Exhibit "OO", which
4228document Escarosa's use of HHS funds during this period of time,
4239show Escarosa did not purchase any BP gas cards. Instead, only
4250CITGO gas cards were purchased prior to June 2005.
425939. Exhibit "S" in evidence, specifically Invoices 2322,
42672426, 2428, 2490, 2515, and 2516 show that Escarosa purchased a
4278total of 7,250 gas cards valued at $133,500. The Agency
4290contends that the value of $127,558, represented by 8,335 gas
4302cards during that time period are unallowable costs, as depicted
4312by Exhibit "L", in evidence. The Agency is thus contending that
4323nearly 100 percent of the gas cards for the year 2005 are
4335undocumented. Such a finding would not be credible nor
4344supported by preponderant, persuasive evidence.
434940. Moreover, Exhibit "L" identifies undocumented cards by
4357serial number. When that exhibit is compared to Exhibit "OO"
4367and Exhibit "S", it would appear that the value of undocumented
4378cards alleged by the Agency ($348,355) includes cards that were
4389never purchased (at least for the WTP program). Exhibit "OO,"
4399for example, shows that Escarosa activated a total of 750 $5.00
4410gas cards for the WTP program in the calendar year January 2005
4422to December 2005. Exhibit "L" however suggests that 1,438 $5.00
4433gas cards are undocumented for that same calendar year. Thus it
4444would appear the undocumented cards total contended for by the
4454Agency either includes cards that were never purchased, which is
4464inappropriate, or includes NCPP program gas cards, which are not
4474part of this dispute and are not related to the program (WTP)
4486and purported undocumented gas cards at issue.
449341. In summary, the analysis employed, based primarily on
4502the College's calculations, to justify a disallowance figure of
4511$348,355 is simply unreliable, as demonstrated by the facts
4521found above. Therefore, although persuasive evidence shows that
4529there is, no doubt, a substantial number of undocumented gas
4539cards, at the very least represented by the ones which were
4550stolen or embezzled by the College employee in question (or
4560others), the evidence does not prove with any precision what
4570that figure for such disallowable costs should be.
457842. This situation and determination might have been
4586alleviated or avoided, in part, had the Petitioner, Escarosa,
4595taken the advice of the Agency and effected an audit of its gas
4608card operation, procedures and WTP program, related to gas card
4618use, which included a precise audit of the number of cards
4629obtained from oil companies and the oil company records which
4639could show which cards had actually been used. Unfortunately,
4648Escarosa declined to do that. Consequently, an accurate, and
4657perhaps a forensic audit, is clearly needed to establish with
4667precision the amount of costs which should be disallowed,
4676represented by the gas card portion of the Petitioner's WTP
4686program.
468743. Based upon the legal authority cited herein, that
4696audit should be performed by the Petitioner Escarosa. It is
4706also observed that, given the facts established by the record in
4717this case, based upon its contract with the College, Escarosa
4727would appear to have a substantial likelihood of recourse
4736against the College and its insurance carrier or servicing
4745agent, for whatever cost disallowance, and related costs and
4754fees, are ultimately proven, if any.
4760CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
476344. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
4770jurisdiction of the subject matter of and the parties to this
4781proceeding. §§ 120.569 and 120.57(1), Fla. Stat.
478845. This is a proceeding where the Agency, the Respondent,
4798has made an initial decision to disallow and require repayment
4808of certain disallowed grant expenditures made by the Petitioner,
4817Escarosa. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
4824jurisdiction to hear such disallowance cases. See Department of
4833Labor and Employment Security v. Indian River Community College ,
4842Case No. 82-032 (DOAH: March 22, 1982; Final Order: November 7,
48531982); Department of Labor and Employment Security v Putnam
4862County Board of County Commissioners , Case No. 82-167 (DOAH:
4871April 16, 1982; Final Order: July 2, 1982). The Respondent
4881Agency's predecessor Agency, The Florida Department of Labor and
4890Employment Security, has had its authority to disallow certain
4899grant-related expenditures, and to require repayment of
4906disallowed costs, upheld. See Department of Labor and
4914Employment Security v Nando-Sumter Community Action Agency , Case
4922No. 84-0719 (DOAH: June 13, 1984; Final Order: August 27, 1984);
4933Department of Labor and Employment Security v Jefferson County
4942Board of County Commissioners , Case No. 82-883 (DOAH: June 14,
49521982; Final Order: August 2, 1982).
495846. The Nando-Sumter and Jefferson County cases are
4966procedurally and factually similar to the instant case, with the
4976Department therein disbursing federal funds to sub-recipients,
4983pursuant to contracts requiring compliance with federal
4990regulations. In those cases, the Recommended Orders and Final
4999Orders recognize that, as the recipient of federal funds, the
5009Florida Department of Labor was responsible for insuring
5017compliance with federal regulations and that Florida law
5025obligated it to carry out the duties assigned to Florida under
5036federal law. Those duties included "entering into contracts on
5045behalf of the State with program operators to locally administer
5055the program." Nando-Sumter at 6. In Jefferson County , the
5064Recommended Order and the Final Order provided that the sub-
5074recipient involved should re-pay the Department of Labor the
5083costs expended "in violation of the contract and applicable
5092regulations."
509347. HHS Department Appeals Board (DAB) decisions have been
5102held to be persuasive in a case such as this where the Agency
5115and Escarosa are required to comply with HHS law and regulations
5126governing HHS grants. AHCA v. Lake Mary Health Care Assocs.,
5136Inc. , Case No. 04-0335 (DOAH: June 8, 2004; Final Order: Feb. 9,
51482005). HHS is the federal agency responsible for promulgating
5157the regulations that are standards by which Escarosa's
5165compliance must be determined. Because these decisions are
5173those of HHS addressing the interpretation and application of
5182its own regulations, the decisions are entitled to substantial
5191deference. S. Valley Health Care Ctr. v. Health Care Fin.
5201Admin. , 223 F.3d 1221, 1223 (10th Cir. 2000) (Courts give
5211substantial deference to agency's interpretation of its own
5219regulations.).
522048. A question was raised in this proceeding concerning
5229whether the College was an indispensable party. An
5237indispensable party is one necessary for a complete
5245determination of all issues and one without which the case
5255cannot further proceed. See Office of the Attorney General,
5264Dept. of Legal Affairs v. Commerce Commercial Leasing , 946 So.
52742d 1253, 1255 (Fla. 1st DCA 2007). Party status for the College
5286is not necessary for a determination of the ultimate issues
5296concerning whether Escarosa has violated the relevant federal
5304regulations and contract, has grant-related expenditures which
5311are not documented or otherwise justified, and whether it must
5321repay the disallowance thereof. An indispensible party is one
5330who is materially interested in the subject matter of the
5340litigation and would be directly affected by its outcome.
5349Everette v. Florida Dept. of Children and Families , 961 So. 2d
5360270, 273 (Fla. 2007). The College in this proceeding would not
5371be "directly affected" since the case will not result in an
5382order adjudicating any of the College's interests. The
5390disallowance issue affects Escarosa and not the College. The
5399fact that the College may become liable to Escarosa for recovery
5410of any disallowed amount, pursuant to the College's contract
5419with Escarosa, does not make the College an indispensible party
5429to this proceeding. See Phillips v. Choate , 456 So. 2d 556, 558
5441(Fla. 4th DCA 1984). Moreover, the College is not an
5451indispensible party where it has no privity of contract between
5461itself and the Agency for Workforce Innovation. See Dept. of
5471HRS v. Southpointe Pharmacy , 636 So. 2d 1377, 1381 (Fla. 1st DCA
54831994). The record reflects that the College had notice of these
5494proceedings and elected not to file a motion to intervene.
5504THE AGENCYS ROLE AND AUTHORITY TO DISALLOW
5511GRANT EXPENDITURES AND REQUIRE REPAYMENT
551649. The Agency is the state administrative entity for
5525receipt of federal workforce development grants and other
5533federal funds, and is the designated agency for each federal
5543workforce development grant assigned to it for administration.
5551§§ 20.50(2)(a) and 20.50(3), Fla. Stat. The Agency is
5560responsible for administering the TANF funds at issue in this
5570proceeding and for ensuring that welfare transition services
5578funded by TANF are provided in compliance with approved
5587administrative plans. § 445.004(5)(b)6, Fla. Stat. The Agency
5595has the level of authority necessary to be the designated
5605recipient of each federal grant assigned to it. § 20.50(3), Fla.
5616Stat. In sum, the Agency is responsible for ensuring that the
5627state appropriately administers federal workforce funding.
5633§ 20.50(1), Fla. Stat.
563750. All program and fiscal instruction to the regional
5646workforce boards is statutorily required to emanate from the
5655Agency. § 20.50(1)(a), Fla. Stat.
566051. OMB Circular No. A-133 , Audits of States, Local
5669Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations , 62 Fed. Reg. 35,278
5678(June 30, 1997) provides the standards and requirements for
5687audits of states, local governments and non-profit organizations
5695expending federal awards or grant funds.
570152. The Agency serves as a pass-through entity which is
5711defined as a non-Federal entity that provides a Federal award
5721to a sub recipient to carry out a Federal program. Sub
5732recipient means a non-Federal entity that expends Federal awards
5741received from a pass-through entity to carry out a Federal
5751program . . . . OMB Circular A-133, Audits of States, Local
5763Governments, and Non-Profit Organizations , 62 Fed. Reg. 35,278
5772§ 105 (June 30, 1997). As an entity that has received an award
5785of TANF funds from the Agency, Escarosa is the Agencys sub
5796recipient.
579753. As a pass-through entity, the Agency has the following
5807responsibilities:
5808Pass-through entity responsibilities . A
5813pass-through entity shall perform the
5818following for the Federal awards it makes:
5825(1) Identify Federal awards made by
5831informing each sub recipient of CFDA title
5838and number, award name and number, award
5845year, if the award is R&D, and name of
5854Federal agency. When some of this
5860information is not available, the pass-
5866through entity shall provide the best
5872information available to describe the
5877Federal award.
5879(2) Advise sub-recipients of requirements
5884imposed on them by Federal laws,
5890regulations, and the provisions of contracts
5896or grant agreements as well as any
5903supplemental requirements imposed by the
5908pass-through entity.
5910(3) Monitor the activities of sub-
5916recipients as necessary to ensure that
5922Federal awards are used for authorized
5928purposes in compliance with laws,
5933regulations, and the provisions of contracts
5939or grant agreements and that performance
5945goals are achieved.
5948(4) Ensure that sub-recipients expending
5953$300,000 ($500,000 for fiscal years ending
5961after December 31, 2003) or more in Federal
5969awards during the sub-recipient's fiscal
5974year have met the audit requirements of this
5982part for that fiscal year.
5987(5) Issue a management decision on audit
5994findings within six months after receipt of
6001the sub-recipient's audit report and ensure
6007that the sub-recipient takes appropriate and
6013timely corrective action.
6016(6) Consider whether sub-recipient audits
6021necessitate adjustment of the pass-through
6026entity's own records.
6029(7) Require each sub-recipient to permit
6035the pass-through entity and auditors to have
6042access to the records and financial
6048statements as necessary for the pass-through
6054entity to comply with this part.
6060OMB Circular No. A-133 , Audits of States, Local Governments, and
6070Non-Profit Organizations , 62 Fed. Reg. 35,278 § 400(d) (June 30,
60811997).
608254. A management decision must include the following:
6090The management decision shall clearly state
6096whether or not the audit finding is
6103sustained, the reasons for the decision, and
6110the expected auditee action to repay
6116disallowed costs, make financial
6120adjustments, or take other action. If the
6127auditee has not completed corrective action,
6133a timetable for follow-up should be given.
6140Prior to issuing the management decision,
6146the Federal agency or pass-through entity
6152may request additional information or
6157documentation from the auditee, including a
6163request for auditor assurance related to the
6170documentation, as a way of mitigating
6176disallowed costs. The management decision
6181should describe any appeal process available
6187to the auditee.
6190OMB Circular No. A-133 , Audits of States, Local Governments, and
6200Non-Profit Organizations , 62 Fed. Reg. 35,278 § 405(a) (June 30,
62111997). The Agency in the grant award, master cooperative
6220agreement, monitoring activities, and management decision has
6227performed its pass-through entity responsibilities.
623255. In the present case, the HHS definition of sub-
6242recipient shows federal acknowledgment of a recipients
6249authority to disallow and require repayment.
6255Sub-recipient means the legal entity to
6261which a sub-award is made and which is
6269accountable to the recipient for the use of
6277the funds provided.
628045 C.F.R. 74.2 (emphasis added). The Master Cooperative
6288Agreement between the Agency and Escarosa further establishes
6296the Agencys authority. It states:
6301Failure to comply with the terms and
6308conditions outlined herein may result in the
6315loss of federal and state funds and may be
6324considered grounds for the suspension or
6330termination of this Agreement and result in
6337a determination of disallowed costs.
6342The Board understands that the Agency may
6349take action to recover disallowed costs and
6356interest. Upon exhaustion of applicable
6361administrative and judicial remedies, the
6366Board agrees to refund the amount of finally
6374determined disallowed costs and interest
6379from non-federal and non-state grant funds.
6385COMPLIANCE REQUIREMENTS FOR EXPENDITURE OF GRANT FUNDS
639256. Escarosa is a regional workforce board and, pursuant
6401to Section 445.007(9), Florida statutes, it must ". . . apply
6412the . . . expenditure procedures required by federal law for
6423the expenditure of federal funds." § 445.007(9), Fla. Stat.
6432This statutory requirement derives from federal requirements for
6440the use of federal funds and is incorporated in the parties'
6451master cooperative agreement and in the grant award of HHS funds
6462to Escarosa. Escarosa is bound by the spending principles of
6472federal law for its HHS/TANF grant.
647857. Escarosa as a "sub-recipient" and auditee has the
6487following responsibilities pursuant to the OMB Circular A-133:
"6495(a) Identify, in its accounts, all Federal
6502awards received and expended and the Federal
6509programs under which they were received. . .
6517(b) Maintain internal control over Federal
6523programs that provides reasonable assurance
6528that the auditee is managing Federal awards
6535in compliance with laws, regulations, and
6541the provisions of contracts or grant
6547agreements that could have a material effect
6554on each of its Federal programs.
6560(c) Comply with laws, regulations, and the
6567provisions of contracts or grant agreements
6573related to each of its Federal programs.
6580(d) Prepare appropriate financial
6584statements, including the schedule of
6589expenditures of Federal awards. . . .
6596(e) Ensure that the audits required by this
6604part are properly performed and submitted
6610when due.
6612(f) Follow up and take corrective action on
6620audit findings, including preparation of a
6626summary schedule of prior audit findings and
6633a corrective action plan . . .".
6641OMB Circular No. A-133, Audits of States, Local Governments, and
6651Non-Profit Organizations , 62 Fed. Reg. 35,278 § 300 (June 30,
66621997).
666358. OMB Circular A-122, Cost Principles for Non-Profit
6671Organizations , 2 C.F.R. Part 230, App. A, § A.2.g. provides that
6682costs or expenditures must be adequately documented in order to
6692be allowable. Escarosa was required to meet the standards for
6702financial management systems in accordance with OMB Circular A-
6711110, Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and
6718Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and
6726Other Non-Profit Organizations , 2 C.F.R § 215.21(b)(2). Such
6734financial management systems must include records that
6741adequately identify the source and application of funds for
6750grant purposes; control over and accountability for all funds,
6759property, and other assets, as well as safeguards to ensure that
6770assets are only used for authorized purposes. Preponderant
6778evidence demonstrates that Escarosa, during the time period at
6787issue, failed to meet the standards for such financial
6796management systems in accordance with OMB Circular A-110, 2
6805C.F.R § 215.21(b)(2), primarily due to the lack of adequate
6815oversight of gas card program operations conducted at the
6824College locations.
6826DISALLOWANCE
682759. The failure to have documentation to support grant-
6836charged expenses is grounds for the Respondent Agency's
6844disallowance of gas card purchases charged to the TANF grant.
6854See OMB Circular A-122, Cost Principles for Non-Profit
6862Organizations , 2 C.F.R Part 230, APP. A. § A.2.g. "Documented"
6872means that items purchased for grant program participants must
6881actually be received by those individuals. Delta Foundation
6889Inc. v. Dept. of Health and Human Services , 303 F.3d 551, 568-70
6901(5th Cir. 2002) ("It is not enough for a cost to be allowable,
6915records must establish that the cost is also allocable to the
6926grant project"). An agency's disallowance of a recipient's
6935expenses has been upheld due to inadequate documentation in a
6945case before the Division of Administrative Hearings as well.
6954See Abilities, Inc. v. Dept. of Education , Case No. 04-2053
6964(DOAH: May 9, 2005; Final Order: July 12, 2005), where the
6975Administrative Law Judge found as follows:
6981Abilities' invoices are not sufficient to
6987show that federal funding for VRS services
6994was spent on VRS services and neither are
7002the invoices and profit-loss statements,
7007etc. provided by ACS. Simply, the funds
7014allegedly used for these services could not
7021be verified or audited by VRS.
702760. Escarosa's purchase orders and records of the
7035College's request for cards do not constitute adequate
7043documentation showing that gas card expenditures were properly
7051charged to the TANF grant because they do not show that eligible
7063participants received them. The gas card logs, with client
7072signatures, are not reliable documentation because they
7079admittedly contain some forged signatures and falsified
7086information. Therefore, they do not reliably show that only
7095eligible participants received gas cards.
710061. Under its authority referenced above, the Agency
7108requested that Escarosa provide additional documentation or
7115auditor-assurance of documentation. The Agency suggested that
7122Escarosa contact the oil companies to obtain further
7130documentation on cards purchased and, more importantly, cards
7138actually used. Escarosa refused to do this and also refused to
7149obtain independent auditor verification as to adequacy of
7157documentation, when it revised its position to assert that it
7167had documentation for all but $5,080 worth of gas cards. As the
7180auditee, however, Escarosa had a responsibility to assist in
7189clearing the audit finding. Thus, it has not complied with
7199federal expenditure principles.
720262. While Escarosa maintained that it had documentation
7210for all but $5,080 worth of gas cards, it did not show that it
7225had adequate supporting information because of the documentation
7233that it purportedly relied on (the logs) referenced above.
7242Thus, in addition to the amount of $5,080, Escarosa did not show
7255that all remaining TANF funds expended for gas cards during the
7266time period in question actually got to the ultimate recipients,
7276the participants in the program. Thus, it was not shown that
7287all such expenditures were used to accomplish grant purposes and
7297therefore, some disallowance would be in order.
730463. The problem with disallowance, and requiring Escarosa
7312to repay the disallowed amounts, is that the postulated
7321disallowed amount of $348,355 has not been established by
7331reliable, substantial evidence. The Agency has accepted the
7339College's calculation that this amount represents the final sum
7348of undocumented cards. The greater weight of the persuasive
7357evidence, however, does not support reliance on that
7365calculation, for the reasons delineated in the above Findings of
7375Fact, including the likelihood that unrelated, irrelevant NCPP
7383funds and gas cards might have been included in the College's
7394calculation. The evidence in support of that amount as being an
7405accurate total, under the circumstances delineated in the above
7414Findings of Fact, is simply not substantial or credible.
742364. In the face of that finding and conclusion, it has
7434neither been established that some other amount, or lesser
7443amount, of undocumented cards has been persuasively proven as
7452being appropriate for disallowance and repayment by the
7460Petitioner. An appropriate independent and/or forensic audit
7467should be conducted. Such an audit should include examination
7476of oil company records, both for determining the exact amount of
7487gas cards purchased during the relevant time period and the
7497precise amount of such gas cards actually used. Until this is
7508accomplished, an appropriate, precise amount of undocumented gas
7516card expenditures, and concomitantly, the magnitude of any
7524departure from the grant requirements cannot be determined.
7532REPAYMENT REQUIREMENT FOR THEFT
753665. The Petitioner, Escarosa, asserts that a grantee is
7545not required to repay federal grant charges that are
7554undocumented by reason of another person's theft. It relies on
7564the absence of reference to a theft repayment requirement in OMB
7575Circular A-122. It is clear, however, that theft does not
7585excuse a requirement that disallowed amounts be repaid. See Sea
7595Mar Community Health Center, Inc. , DAB No. 1459 at 10 (1994)
7606(Grantee had an "obligation to repay or properly account for the
7617embezzled funds."). See also Oglala Sioux Tribe , DAB No. 498 at
76292 (1984) where the DAB found that money which was stolen could
7641not have "been expended for grant purposes." In Oglala Sioux
7651Early Childhood Component , DAB No. 680 at 1 (1985), the party
7662who stole grant-purchased property was the grantee's third-party
7670business associate rather than its own employee. Even though
7679the theft was due to no fault of the grantee and beyond its
7692control, the DAB upheld the disallowance since stolen grant
7701property constitutes unallowable "bad debts" under OMB Circular
7709A-122. Theft of gas cards does not relieve Escarosa of the
7720requirement that it repay amounts thus not used for grant
7730purposes because of the theft.
773566. The Petitioner also contends that, even if it is
7745required to repay some disallowed amount representing
7752undocumented gas card funds, the Respondent Agency does not have
7762authority to require such repayment from non-federal funds.
7770Moreover, it contends that, as a practical matter, it has no
7781funds which are non-federal with which it could repay any
7791disallowance.
779267. However, expenditures disallowed, and therefore not
7799allowed to be paid from federal grant funds, cannot be repaid
7810using federal grant funds. The law governing HHS grants
7819requires the Agency, as a pass-through entity, to request
7828repayment of disallowed HHS funds from non-federal sources.
7836Anderson-Oconee Headstart Project, Inc. , DAB No. 090 (1980)
7844(Disallowed grant expenses must be repaid from non-federal funds
7853despite the recipient's insistence that it had no non-federal
7862funds.)
786368. The Respondent Agency has the authority to require
7872repayment of any disallowance, ultimately established as to
7880amount, out of non-federal funds. Escarosa, in turn, would
7889seem, pursuant to its contract with the College, to have some
7900opportunity for recourse against the College in pursuing
7908recovery of any disallowed amount.
791369. Escarosa also contends that the Agency's failure
7921through its monitoring program, to timely discover the problems
7930attendant to the gas card program should relieve it from having
7941to re-pay grant funds not spent for grant purposes. The case
7952law, however, supports the proposition that even if the
7961Respondent Agency failed to discover the problems with the gas
7971card program, through not adequately monitoring that program,
7979that Escarosa still is not relieved from repayment of any grant
7990funds expended for non-grant purposes, either intentionally or
7998inadvertently. Florida AFL-CIO, Inc. v. Florida Dept. of Labor
8007and Employment Security , Case No. 88-2755 (DOAH: Jan. 20, 1989;
8017Final Order: Mar. 17, 1989). In that case, the Department of
8028Labor disallowed federal grant funds based upon fraudulent
8036misappropriations by the recipient's employee. The grantee
8043argued that the Agency's disallowance should be overturned
8051because it had failed to discover the misappropriation through
8060monitoring of the grantee. In the Recommended Order, the
8069Division of Administrative Hearings determined that the failure
8077to monitor the recipient did not constitute a valid defense:
8087A further Petitioner argument is that it
8094should be excused from the repayment sought
8101by the Respondent because the Respondent
8107failed to properly monitor the Petitioner's
8113performance under the contract. In this
8119regard, it is argued that better monitoring
8126would likely have resulted in earlier
8132detection of the fraudulent activities of
8138the Petitioner's employee. The argument
8143misses the point. The Petitioner is not
8150being penalized because of the fraudulent
8156activities of its employee; it is being
8163asked to return the fruits of that
8170fraudulent activity. The timing of the
8176discovery of the fraud has no bearing on the
8185Petitioner's obligation to repay
8189fraudulently obtained funds.
8192Florida AFL-CIO, Inc. v. Florida Dept. of Labor and
8201Employment Security , supra . Even if the Agency herein should
8211have discovered the lack of documentation or theft earlier,
8220through better monitoring, a belated discovery still does not
8229exonerate Escarosa from its liability for any undocumented use
8238of grant funds.
824170. In summary, the Agency has authority to proceed
8250against Escarosa and demand repayment of grant funds which were
8260not used for approved grant purposes, in this case by not being
8272adequately documented as to who the recipients were, when they
8282received the gas cards and that they were appropriately approved
8292clients of the program entitled to receive the gas cards. The
8303fact remains, however, that the evidence in this case is not
8314reliable in establishing with any precision what the disallowed
8323amount should be, for the reasons determined in the above
8333Findings of Fact. Therefore, it cannot be recommended that
8342Escarosa repay any amount at this time. The preliminary step of
8353conducting an adequate audit and/or forensic audit, which
8361accords with generally-accepted accounting principles, as well
8368as the above-referenced federal grant administration legal
8375authority, must be conducted before the magnitude of funds and
8385gas card expenditures which are genuinely undocumented and
8393therefore subject to repayment can be determined. Such an audit
8403should be required to be conducted by the Petitioner, Escarosa.
8413Parenthetically, it is noted that the Petitioner may have the
8423ability to obtain recompense for the attendant expenses from its
8433contracting partner, the College.
8437RECOMMENDATION
8438Having considered the foregoing findings of fact,
8445conclusions of law, the evidence of record, the candor and
8455demeanor of the witnesses and the pleadings and arguments of the
8466parties, it is, therefore,
8470RECOMMENDED that a final order be entered by the Agency for
8481Workforce Innovation requiring the Petitioner, Workforce
8487Escarosa, Inc., to conduct an appropriate independent audit
8495and/or forensic audit, which accords with generally accepted
8503accounting principles and the above-referenced federal grant
8510management and administration authority, which might show with
8518precision any extant undocumented amount of grant-related funds
8526from within the gas card program, for the relevant audit period
8537referenced in the above Findings of Fact. When that is
8547accomplished, the parties may take such substantive and
8555procedural steps as their interests may indicate.
8562DONE AND ENTERED this 30th day of October, 2009, in
8572Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
8576S
8577P. MICHAEL RUFF
8580Administrative Law Judge
8583Division of Administrative Hearings
8587The DeSoto Building
85901230 Apalachee Parkway
8593Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
8596(850) 488-9675
8598Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
8602www.doah.state.fl.us
8603Filed with the Clerk of the
8609Division of Administrative Hearings
8613this 30th day of October, 2009.
8619ENDNOTE
86201/ All statutory references shall be to 2008 Florida Statutes,
8630unless otherwise noted.
8633COPIES FURNISHED :
8636James E. Landsberg, Esquire
8640Peter James Caldwell, Esquire
8644Agency for Workforce Innovation
8648The Caldwell Building, MSC 110
8653107 East Madison Street
8657Tallahassee, Florida 32399-4128
8660Susan Nelms, Executive Director
8664Workforce Escarosa, Inc.
86679111 A Sturdevant Street
8671Pensacola, Florida 32514
8674Joseph Passeretti, Esquire
867730 South Spring Street
8681Pensacola, Florida 32502
8684Cynthia Lorenzo, Interim Executive Director
8689Agency for Workforce Innovation
8693Office of the General Counsel
8698Caldwell Building
8700107 East Madison Street, Ste.212
8705Tallahassee, Florida 32399-4120
8708Veronica Moss, Administrative Assistant II
8713Agency for Workforce Innovation
8717Office of the General Counsel
8722Caldwell Building
8724107 East Madison Street, Ste.212
8729Tallahassee, Florida 32399-4120
8732NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
8738All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
874815 days from the date of this Recommended Order. Any exceptions
8759to this Recommended Order should be filed with the agency that
8770will issue the Final Order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 10/30/2009
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying the hearing record referred to the Agency.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/21/2009
- Proceedings: Proposed Recommended Order of Respondent Agency for Workforce Innovation filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/07/2009
- Proceedings: Order Granting Extension of Time (proposed recommended orders to be filed by August 21, 2009).
- PDF:
- Date: 07/30/2009
- Proceedings: Unopposed Motion for Extension of Time to File Proposed Recommended Order filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 07/30/2009
- Proceedings: Respondent's Motion for Extension of Time to File Proposed Recommended Order filed.
- Date: 07/13/2009
- Proceedings: Transcript (Volumes I-III) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 07/01/2009
- Proceedings: Letter to Judge Ruff from P. Caldwell enclosing certified copies of all decisions by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Appeals Board (documents not available for viewing) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/23/2009
- Proceedings: Response to Petititioner's First Request for Admissions to Respondent filed.
- Date: 06/17/2009
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/16/2009
- Proceedings: Notice of Supplemental Exhibits (Exhibits 'OO' 'PP' 'QQ' and 'RR'; exhibits not available for viewing) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/12/2009
- Proceedings: Respondent's Notebook of Exhibits (1 and 2; exhibits not available for viewing) filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 06/03/2009
- Proceedings: Response from Petitioner to Respondent's First Set of Interrogatories filed.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/10/2009
- Proceedings: Order Granting Continuance and Re-scheduling Hearing (hearing set for June 17 and 18, 2009; 10:00 a.m., Central Time; Pensacola, FL).
Case Information
- Judge:
- P. MICHAEL RUFF
- Date Filed:
- 12/01/2008
- Date Assignment:
- 12/01/2008
- Last Docket Entry:
- 01/25/2010
- Location:
- Pensacola, Florida
- District:
- Northern
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN PART OR MODIFIED
Counsels
-
Peter James Caldwell, Esquire
Address of Record -
James E Landsberg, Esquire
Address of Record -
Susan Nelms
Address of Record -
Peter Caldwell, Esquire
Address of Record