GRANTS TO ENCOURAGE ARREST POLICIES AND

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16.590 GRANTS TO ENCOURAGE ARREST POLICIES AND ENFORCEMENT OF PROTECTION ORDERS State Project/Program: GRANTS TO ENCOURAGE ARREST POLICIES AND ENFORCEMENT OF PROTECTION ORDERS APRIL 2006 Federal Authorization: U. S. Department of Justice Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, codified as amended at 42 USC 3796hh.; Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, Section 40152, as amended, Violence Against Women Act of 2000, P.L. 106-386. State Authorization: N/A N. C. Department of Crime Control and Public Safety Agency Contact Person Program Barry Bryant Lead Planner (919) 733-4564 Agency Contact Person Financial Elaine Freeman (919) 733-2193 Address Confirmation Letters To Fiscal Wesley H. Walters N.C. Department of Crime Control and Public Safety Governor s Crime Commission 1201 Front Street Suite 200 Raleigh, NC 27609 (919) 733-4564 ext. 212 wwalters@ncgccd.org The auditor should not consider the Supplement to be safe harbor for identifying audit procedures to apply in a particular engagement, but the auditor should be prepared to justify departures from the suggested procedures. The auditor can consider the supplement a safe harbor for identification of compliance requirements to be tested if the auditor performs reasonable procedures to ensure that the requirements in the Supplement are current. The grantor agency may elect to review audit working papers to determine that audit tests are adequate. I. PROGRAM OBJECTIVE To implement mandatory arrest or proarrest programs and policies in police departments, including mandatory arrest programs and policies for protection order violations, as part of a coordinated community response to domestic violence; to develop policies, educational programs, and training programs in police departments to improve tracking of cases involving domestic violence and dating violence; to centralize and coordinate police enforcement, prosecution, probation, parole and/or judicial responsibility for domestic violence cases in groups or units of police officers, prosecutors, probation and parole officers, or judges; to coordinate computer tracking systems to ensure communication between police, prosecutors, parole and probation officers and both criminal and family courts; to strengthen legal advocacy service programs for victims of domestic violence and dating violence, including strengthening assistance to such victims in immigration matters; and to educate judges in criminal and other courts about domestic violence and to improve judicial handling of such cases; to provide technical assistance and computer and other equipment to police departments, prosecutors, courts, and tribal jurisdictions to facilitate the widespread enforcement of protection orders, including interstate enforcement, enforcement between States and tribal jurisdictions, and enforcement between tribal jurisdictions; to develop or strengthen policies and training for police, prosecutors, and the judiciary in recognizing, investigating, and prosecuting B-4 16.590 1

instances of domestic violence and sexual assault against older individuals and individuals with disabilities. II. PROGRAM PROCEDURES The awarding Federal agency (DOJ) announces its programs available for funding in the Federal Register. The State submits its Application for Federal Assistance (SF 424) and DOJ reviews the application and approves it with an Award Document (Form 4000/2) which provides the grant period, the award amount, and special conditions. The State accepts the award by signing the Award Document and returning it within 45 days from the beginning date of the award. The State then announces its programs available for funding each November in its Announcement of Availability of Federal Grant Funds. All eligible applicants are listed in the Announcement. Eligible applicants are local units of government, councils of government, universities or colleges, independent school systems, state agencies and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. Eligible applicants (Implementing Agencies) then submit a pre-application for a project for review by the Governor s Crime Commission. Grant applications are available from the Governor s Crime Commission Office or from their web site at www.gcc.state.nc.us. Once the pre-applications are reviewed and ranked, selected recipients are then notified by April 1 st that they are then required to submit a full application with additional information for review. Once a grant project is finally selected for funding, a Grant Award is issued which provides the federal award amount, the grant period, special conditions, etc. The grantee accepts the award by signing the Award document and returning it within 20 days from the beginning date of the award. The grant project must be operational within 60 days of the beginning of the grant and so certified by a Notice of Grant Implementation Report (GCC-01). The Office of Justice Programs Financial Guide and the GCC Grant Award Packet must be used for the administration of this grant. III. COMPLIANCE REQUIREMENTS AND SUGGESTED AUDIT PROCEDURES A. ACTIVITIES ALLOWED OR UNALLOWED The U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance has 26 federally allowable program areas in which to expend their federal funds. The Governor s Crime Commission then selected their funding priorities from those 26 program areas and those are listed in our Announcement. Federal grant funds can then only be expended on those services that are directly related to their approved grant application. Their project is directly related to one of the federally recognized program areas. The specific project activities allowed are those found in the Project Operation section (page 2) and Project Goals, Objectives, and Activities (page 3) of the full application. 1. Review the full grant application and note the following sections; Project Operation (page 2) and Project Goals, Objectives, and Activities (page 3). B-4 16.590 2

2. Test expenditures and related records for adherence to the approved grant budget and subsequent grant budget adjustments. B. ALLOWABLE COSTS/COST PRINCIPLES All grantees are required to abide by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circulars, as applicable: A-102, Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements with State and Local Governments; A-110, Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Agreements with Institutions of Higher Education, Hospitals, and Other Non-Profit Organizations; A-21, Cost Principles for Educational Institutions; A-87, Cost Principles for State, Local, and Indian Tribal Governments; and, A-122, Cost Principles for Non-Profit Organizations. The grantee must also comply to the Standard Grant Conditions as stated in the Grant Award Package which is distributed by the Governor s Crime Commission. The Governor s Crime Commission, as a part of their monitoring efforts, considers allowable costs to be those that are listed in the approved grant application budget section, pages 5&6, in their approved full application and those which would be included on any approved grant budget adjustments. 1. Review full grant application budget (pages 5-6). 2. Test expenditures and related records for adherence to approved application budget and any subsequent approved grant budget adjustments. C. CASH MANAGEMENT Funds are submitted to all grantees from DCCPS-GCC on a reimbursement basis. No testing is required since funds are not advanced to grantees. F. EQUIPMENT AND REAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT Grantees are instructed to follow their own written policies for equipment purchases. If they do not have a written policy, they should follow the procedures in the Grant Award Package that is distributed to all grantees each year. All equipment purchases should be for the purposes or activities of the grant only. The title for equipment purchased under the grant is vested with the implementing agency. The procedure for disposal of equipment is outlined in the Grant Award Package. According to the Grant Award Package which is distributed to each grantee, the grantee is required to keep a Property Control Record Form (GCC-07) for all equipment purchased with grant funds. The Governor s Crime Commission considers equipment as any item with a value of $500.00. B-4 16.590 3

1. Verify that the grantee is in fact properly keeping the Property Control Record Form (GCC- 07). 2. Verify if the equipment still exists and is being used as stated in the full application. 3. Verify as to whether or not the equipment has been disposed of and if the grantee has requested and properly followed disposition instructions from the awarding agency. G. MATCHING, LEVEL OF EFFORT, EARMARKING Grants will be made for amounts up to 100 percent of the costs of the programs or projects contained in the approved applications. Match is not required for this grant program; however, applicants are encouraged to maximize the impact of Federal dollars by contributing to the cost of the project. Supplemental contributions may be cash, in-kind services, or a combination of both. Level of Effort and Earmarking are not applicable at the local level and no test work is required. 1. Review Award Document for total federal funding. 2. Test expenditures and reports to ascertain total cost of project and verify non-federal matching requirements met. 3. Verify source of non-federal matching funds. 4. Verify that the funds awarded will not be utilized to supplant State and/or local funds that would otherwise be available to the grantee or supplant other federal funds with DCSI funds. H. PERIOD OF AVAILABILITY OF FEDERAL FUNDS Federal funds can only be obligated within the period of availability listed on the Grant Award document or as amended on a Grant Adjustment form. Obligations must be liquidated within the required time period. For grants ending June 30 th, the grantee has 90 days within to request their final reimbursement of funds. And for grants ending on dates other than June 30 th, they have 60 days within to request their final reimbursement of funds. Failure to request funds within these time frames could result in the grantee not being reimbursed their final reimbursement of funds. 1. Test a sample of transactions charged to the Federal award after the end of the period of availability and verify that the underlying obligations occurred within the period of availability and that the liquidation (payment) was made within the allowed time period. B-4 16.590 4

2. Test a sample of transactions that were recorded during the period of availability and verify that the underlying obligations occurred within the period of availability. I. PROCUREMENT, SUSPENSION AND DEBARMENT According to the aforementioned OMB Circulars (A-102, A-110, A-21, A-87 and A-122) and as stated in the Grant Award Package, the grantee must comply with Federal Debarment and Suspension regulations by requiring completion of the Certification Regarding Debarment, Suspension, Ineligibility and Voluntary Exclusion Lower Tier Covered Transactions by subrecipients prior to entering into a financial agreement with the sub-recipients for any transaction as outlined below: Any procurement contract for goods and services, regardless of amount, under which the sub-recipient will have a critical influence on or substantive control over the transaction. The grantee is responsible for monitoring the submission and maintaining the official document for review by the Governor s Crime Commission. 1. As stated in the Grant Award Package, verify that all contracts have received prior approval by the Governor s Crime Commission prior to execution. 2. A certification regarding suspension and debarment is required from the contractor. J. PROGRAM INCOME According to the Grant Award Package that is distributed to all grantees, all program income generated by this grant during the project period must be reported to the Governor s Crime Commission following the month earned and must be put back into the project or be used to reduce the grantor participation in the program. The use or planned use of all program income must have prior written approval. 1. Test to verify that program income was properly tracked and accounted for. 2. Ensure that program income was used to make additional services available to crime victims. 3. Verify that the grantee did in fact receive prior written approval for the use or planned use of their program income. L. REPORTING The grantee is required to submit to the Governor s Crime Commission Grants Management Section the Notice of Grant Implementation form (GCC-01) within sixty days of the beginning of the grant period, normally July 1 st during the regular grant cycle. B-4 16.590 5

The grantee is required to submit monthly Cost Reports for reimbursement by the Governor s Crime Commission. The Cost Report is a one page document which the grantee uses to report their monthly expenditures according to the five major budget categories (personnel, contractual, travel, supplies/operating expenses, and equipment). Along with the Cost Report, the grantee is requested to send photocopies of all expenditure documentation (i.e. time sheets, travel logs, purchase orders, etc.). The grantee is also required to submit an annual Grant Progress Report during each year of their grant. If the grantee has a two-year grant, the first Grant Progress Report is required by May 15 th along with their Request for Second Year Funding. Second year funding will not be added to their grant without the accompanying progress report. Their second and/or final Grant Progress Report must be submitted along with their final cost report. Payment of the final cost report will not be made without the submission of the grant progress report. Instructions for reports and reporting are included in the Grant Award Package. 1. Review the grantee s procedures for preparing the State Reports and evaluate for adequacy. 2. Test reports for completeness. 3. Trace data on reports and verify that they agree with supporting documentation. 4. Review adjustments made to General Ledger amounts in the reports affecting State and/or Federal programs and then evaluate for propriety. M. SUBRECIPIENT MONITORING The grantee does not sub-grant funds to sub-recipients. No testing is required at the local level for sub-recipient monitoring. B-4 16.590 6