Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) GATA established
a Grantee Compliance Enforcement System (GCES) that outlines a statewide
framework for State agencies to manage occurrences of noncompliance with grant
requirements.
b) Grantees and
applicants may not participate in State-issued award programs or activities if
they are debarred, suspended or otherwise deemed ineligible under the terms of
the GCES.
c) GCES is required for
all grants that are subject to UR and GATA. (All grants are assumed to be
subject to UR and GATA unless an exception or exemption was authorized by GATU
in accordance with Section
7000.60(f).)
d) GATA requires GOMB to maintain a list
that contains the names of those individuals and entities that are
ineligible, either temporarily or permanently, to receive grant funds from the
State. [30 ILCS
708/60(a)(8)] The list, termed the
Illinois Stop Payment List, is a component of GCES.
e) The Illinois Stop Payment List is a
dynamic snapshot of awardees out of compliance with select grant management
requirements. Entities on the Illinois Stop Payment List are in Stop Payment
Status. Utilizing a centralized list of awardees in Stop Payment Status raises
awareness of noncompliance to promote timely resolution and safeguarding of
State resources.
f) Under GCES, the
severity of an entity's noncompliance issue determines whether the entity is
placed on temporary or permanent Stop Payment Status. Permanent Stop Payment
Status requires a preponderance of the evidence as defined by
2 CFR
180.990. A temporary Stop Payment Status can
be remediated.
1) Delinquent Reporting Based
on the Terms Specified in the Grant Agreement
A) Agency rules shall specify procedures for
managing awardee submittal of required financial and performance reports. The
protocol shall provide a due diligence process for State agency-generated
reminders to the awardee in advance of reporting due dates.
B) Agency rules shall allow the State
awarding agency to extend the reporting deadline due to extenuating
circumstances. Reporting extensions must be justified in writing by the State
awarding agency. A report due date may only be extended one time.
C) The State awarding agency shall withhold
payments to the entity if a report is more than 15 business days past the
original or extended due date. Agency rules shall include awardee notification
of the State agency contact for Stop Payment Status inquiries.
D) If the report is not submitted within 30
business days after the original or extended due date, the State awarding
agency shall place the awardee in temporary Stop Payment Status on the Illinois
Stop Payment List. (See Section
7000.260.)
2) Immediate Placement on Stop Payment List
in Temporary Status. The following occurrences of noncompliance will result in
the awardee being immediately placed in temporary Stop Payment Status on the
Illinois Stop Payment List:
A) Failure to
submit a required refund payment or missed payment from the payment plan within
15 business days after the due date (including approved extensions);
B) Failure to clear fiscal or administrative
monitoring issues;
C) Failure to
submit an audit report within 15 business days after the due date (including
approved extensions);
D) Failure to
respond to an outstanding audit report or onsite review correction action for
deficiencies and material weaknesses, including payment of questioned
costs;
E) Fact-based discretionary
issues documented by the Agency Director, General Counsel, Agency's Office of
the Inspector General, Chief Financial Officer, Chief of Staff, or Chief
Operating Officer. (See Section 7000.260.)
3) Grantees will be placed in permanent Stop
Payment Status on the Illinois Stop Payment List for the following infractions:
A) Facts documented by the applicable State
agency, including but not limited to:
i)
Conviction of, or civil judgment for, commission of fraud or a criminal
offense, violation of federal or state antitrust statutes, commission of
embezzlement, theft, forgery, bribery, falsification or destruction of records,
tax evasion, or commission of any other offense indicating a lack of business
integrity or business honesty that seriously and directly affects the grantee's
present responsibility.
ii)
Violation of grant terms or a transaction so serious as to affect the integrity
of the program, such as a willful failure to perform in accordance with grant
terms, a history of failure to perform or of unsatisfactory performance, or a
willful violation of statutory or regulatory provisions or requirements
applicable to a grant.
iii) Any
other cause so serious or compelling in nature that it affects present
responsibilities.
B)
Fraud documented by the Office of the Executive Inspector General or another
governmental entity's investigation.
4) In accordance with the Illinois State
Collection Act of 1986, all debts that exceed $250 and are more than 90 days
past due shall be placed on the Comptroller's Offset System unless (i)
the State agency shall have entered into a deferred payment plan or
demonstrates to the Comptroller's satisfaction that referral for offset is not
cost effective; or (ii) the State agency is a university that elects to place
in the Comptroller's Offset System only debts that exceed $1,000 and are more
than 90 days past due. All debt, and maintenance of that debt, that is placed
in the Comptroller's Offset System must be submitted electronically to the
Office of the Comptroller. Any exceptions to this requirement must be approved
in writing by the Comptroller. [30 ILCS
210/5] .
g) Procedure
1) The State awarding agency shall notify the
grantee in writing of the non-compliance issue. The communication must state
that the grantee and its parent organization, if applicable under subsection
(h), will be placed on the Illinois Stop Payment List if adequate action by the
grantee, including raising any objections, is not taken within 15 calendar days
after receipt of the notification.
2) State agencies shall have the discretion
to determine the medium of written correspondence, including e-mail
distribution, certified mail, or post office delivery. If applicable, the
parent of the entity shall be copied on the correspondence. The written
correspondence must specify the following:
A)
Grantee name of record and FEIN;
B)
Applicable grant award name and CSFA number;
C) Non-compliance issues, with detailed facts
to support each issue;
D) How the
grantee can correct the non-compliance issue, if applicable;
E) An opportunity for dialogue or written
objections regarding the non-compliance issue;
F) Contact information for questions or
coordination of corrective action; and
G) A statement that State agencies cannot
execute or modify grants to entities on the Illinois Stop Payment List and that
payments to entities on the Illinois Stop Payment List will be subject to
additional authorization.
3) If the grantee takes no adequate action
within 15 calendar days after it receives the notice, the State agency shall
place the grantee and the grantee's parent, if applicable, on the Illinois Stop
Payment List. A written notice in the form of a final administrative
determination shall be provided to the grantee and the grantee's parent, if
applicable, stating that the Stop Payment Status has been invoked on that date
or upon another date specified in the State agency's grant rules.
4) If the State agency receives a written
notice from the grantee within 15 calendar days after the grantee receives the
notice, the agency shall endeavor to review the objection within 15 calendar
days to determine whether the grantee has complied with the requirements at
issue.
A) If the agency decides in favor of
the grantee, it shall notify the grantee that the grantee is in compliance and
will not be placed on the Illinois Stop Payment List based on the
non-compliance issue under discussion.
B) If the agency decides against the grantee,
it shall notify the grantee that the grantee is not in compliance and will be
added to the Illinois Stop Payment List. If the non-compliance issue is a
delinquent report, then, following the resolution of the grantee's unsuccessful
objection, the grantee shall be added to the Illinois Stop Payment List either
30 calendar days after the original report's due date (or, if more than 30
calendar days have passed since the report's due date, 10 calendar days after
the agency's decision) or on a different date specified by the State agency's
grant rules.
h) The following protocol shall apply under a
parent/child relationship:
1) If the parent or
child is placed on temporary or permanent Stop Payment Status, all children
will be placed on the same Stop Payment Status.
2) If the child is placed on temporary Stop
Payment Status, the parent will be placed on temporary Stop Payment Status as
well, because the parent is accountable for compliance oversight of the
child.
3) If the child is placed on
permanent Stop Payment Status as the result of the actions of an individual,
the parent will be notified and will also be placed on permanent Stop Payment
Status, because the parent is accountable for compliance oversight of the
child. A parent may be pardoned from the non-compliance issue and removed from
permanent Stop Payment Status. To do so, the parent must provide evidence to
the State agency that imposed the Stop Payment Status that adequate internal
controls have been implemented and are functioning to guard against a
recurrence of the non-compliance issue. The State agency shall then remove the
parent's permanent Stop Payment Status, but may impose additional specific
conditions for grant oversight.
4)
The State awarding agency may impose oversight requirements to enforce
accountability in other parent/child relationships.
i) State agencies may not execute or modify a
grant to increase funding or extend the grant term of an entity on the Illinois
Stop Payment List. State agencies shall refer to the State Staff Inquiry Screen
or the Illinois Stop Payment List to verify Stop Payment Status.
1) GOMB will initiate a nightly data inquiry
to compare awardee FEIN numbers on the Illinois Stop Payment List to the
Illinois Comptroller's Data Warehouse to determine if any transactions have
occurred after the Stop Pay Date.
2) If a payment transaction has been
initiated to an entity on the Illinois Stop Payment list:
A) The State agency that initiated the
transaction will be notified via email of the Stop Pay Status and provided a
link to the awardee's Illinois Stop Payment record.
B) The State agency shall review the Illinois
Stop Payment record and determine if the recent payment initiated by the State
agency should be withheld. It is recommended that the Stop Payment Status be
enforced; however, extenuating circumstances (e.g., court order, consent
decree, or federally-mandated funding or matching requirements) may require the
payment.
C) If applicable, the
State agency shall explain why the Stop Payment Status is being overridden
using the Payment Justification field in the Illinois Stop Payment List. All
decisions to override the Stop Payment Status must be justified in the List.
The override can be valid for one payment or a period of time. Each override
cannot exceed the duration of the current fiscal year (including the lapse
period).
j)
Only the State agency that placed an awardee on the Illinois Stop Payment List
can remove the Stop Pay Status.
1) The State
agency that issued the Stop Pay Status is responsible for follow-up to resolve
noncompliance.
2) When the
noncompliance issues are resolved, the State agency that issued the Stop Pay
Status shall remove the awardee from the Illinois Stop Payment List.
3) Refer to Section
7000.260(d)
(Maintenance and Use of the Illinois Stop Payment List).
k) The Illinois Stop Payment List will
archive all Stop Pay Statuses to document historic prior grant compliance
issues. State agencies are encouraged to consider all Stop Pay Status
occurrences as part of the awarding or modifying process.