Office of the Legislative Auditor General established -- Qualifications -- Powers, functions, and duties.
Checkout our iOS App for a better way to browser and research.
(1) There is created an Office of the Legislative Auditor General as a permanent staff office for the Legislature.
(2) The legislative auditor general shall be a licensed certified public accountant or certified internal auditor with at least five years of experience in the auditing or public accounting profession, or the equivalent, prior to appointment.
(3) The legislative auditor general shall appoint and develop a professional staff within budget limitations.
(4)
(a) The Office of the Legislative Auditor General shall exercise the constitutional authority provided in Article VI, Sec. 33, Utah Constitution.
(b) Under the direction of the legislative auditor general, the office shall:
(i) conduct comprehensive and special purpose audits, examinations, and reviews of any entity that receives public funds;
(ii) prepare and submit a written report on each audit, examination, or review to the Legislative Management Committee, the audit subcommittee, and to all members of the Legislature within 75 days after the audit or examination is completed; and
(iii) monitor and conduct a risk assessment of any efficiency evaluations in accordance with Title 63J, Chapter 1, Part 9, Government Performance Reporting and Efficiency Process, and legislative rule.
(5) The audit, examination, or review of any entity that receives public funds may include a determination of any or all of the following:
(a) the honesty and integrity of all the entity's fiscal affairs;
(b) the accuracy and reliability of the entity's financial statements and reports;
(c) whether or not the entity's financial controls are adequate and effective to properly record and safeguard its acquisition, custody, use, and accounting of public funds;
(d) whether or not the entity's administrators have faithfully adhered to legislative intent;
(e) whether or not the entity's operations have been conducted in an efficient, effective, and cost efficient manner;
(f) whether or not the entity's programs have been effective in accomplishing intended objectives; and
(g) whether or not the entity's management control and information systems are adequate and effective.
(6) The Office of the Legislative Auditor General:
(a)
(i) shall, notwithstanding any other provision of law, have access to all records, documents, and reports of any entity that receives public funds that are necessary to the scope of the duties of the legislative auditor general or the office; and
(ii) may issue a subpoena to obtain access as provided in Subsection (6)(a)(i) using the procedures contained in Title 36, Chapter 14, Legislative Subpoena Powers;
(b) establish policies, procedures, methods, and standards of audit work for the office and staff;
(c) prepare and submit each audit report without interference from any source relative to the content of the report, the conclusions reached in the report, or the manner of disclosing the results of the legislative auditor general's findings; and
(d) prepare and submit the annual budget request for the office.
(7) To preserve the professional integrity and independence of the office:
(a) no legislator or public official may urge the appointment of any person to the office; and
(b) the legislative auditor general may not be appointed to serve on any board, authority, commission, or other agency of the state during the legislative auditor general's term as legislative auditor general.
(8) The following records in the custody or control of the legislative auditor general shall be protected records under Title 63G, Chapter 2, Government Records Access and Management Act:
(a) Records that would disclose information relating to allegations of personal misconduct, gross mismanagement, or illegal activity of a past or present governmental employee if the information or allegation cannot be corroborated by the legislative auditor general through other documents or evidence, and the records relating to the allegation are not relied upon by the legislative auditor general in preparing a final audit report.
(b) Records and audit workpapers to the extent they would disclose the identity of a person who during the course of a legislative audit, communicated the existence of any waste of public funds, property, or manpower, or a violation or suspected violation of a law, rule, or regulation adopted under the laws of this state, a political subdivision of the state, or any recognized entity of the United States, if the information was disclosed on the condition that the identity of the person be protected.
(c) Prior to the time that an audit is completed and the final audit report is released, records or drafts circulated to a person who is not an employee or head of a governmental entity for their response or information.
(d) Records that would disclose an outline or part of any audit survey plans or audit program.
(e) Requests for audits, if disclosure would risk circumvention of an audit.
(f) The provisions of Subsections (8)(a), (b), and (c) do not prohibit the disclosure of records or information that relate to a violation of the law by a governmental entity or employee to a government prosecutor or peace officer.
(g) The provisions of this section do not limit the authority otherwise given to the legislative auditor general to classify a document as public, private, controlled, or protected under Title 63G, Chapter 2, Government Records Access and Management Act.
(9) The legislative auditor general shall:
(a) be available to the Legislature and to the Legislature's committees for consultation on matters relevant to areas of the legislative auditor general's professional competence;
(b) conduct special audits as requested by the Legislative Management Committee;
(c) report immediately in writing to the Legislative Management Committee through its audit subcommittee any apparent violation of penal statutes disclosed by the audit of a state agency and furnish to the Legislative Management Committee all information relative to the apparent violation;
(d) report immediately in writing to the Legislative Management Committee through its audit subcommittee any apparent instances of malfeasance or nonfeasance by a state officer or employee disclosed by the audit of a state agency; and
(e) make any recommendations to the Legislative Management Committee through its audit subcommittee with respect to the alteration or improvement of the accounting system used by any entity that receives public funds.
(10) If the legislative auditor general conducts an audit of a state agency that has previously been audited and finds that the state agency has not implemented a recommendation made by the legislative auditor general in a previous audit, the legislative auditor general shall, upon release of the audit:
(a) report immediately in writing to the Legislative Management Committee through its audit subcommittee that the state agency has not implemented that recommendation; and
(b) shall report, as soon as possible, that the state agency has not implemented that recommendation to a meeting of an appropriate legislative committee designated by the audit subcommittee of the Legislative Management Committee.
(11)
(a) Prior to each annual general session, the legislative auditor general shall prepare a summary of the audits conducted and of actions taken based upon them during the preceding year.
(b) This report shall also set forth any items and recommendations that are important for consideration in the forthcoming session, together with a brief statement or rationale for each item or recommendation.
(c) The legislative auditor general shall deliver the report to the Legislature and to the appropriate committees of the Legislature.
(12)
(a) No person or entity may:
(i) interfere with a legislative audit, examination, or review of any entity conducted by the office; or
(ii) interfere with the office relative to the content of the report, the conclusions reached in the report, or the manner of disclosing the results and findings of the office.
(b) Any person or entity that violates the provisions of this Subsection (12) is guilty of a class B misdemeanor.
(13)
(a) Beginning July 1, 2020, the Office of the Legislative Auditor General may require any current employee, or any applicant for employment, to submit to a fingerprint-based local, regional, and criminal history background check as an ongoing condition of employment.
(b) An employee or applicant for employment shall provide a completed fingerprint card to the office upon request. The office shall require that an individual required to submit to a background check under this subsection also provide a signed waiver on a form provided by the office that meets the requirements of Subsection 53-10-108(4).
(c) For a noncriminal justice background search and registration in accordance with Subsection 53-10-108(13), the office shall submit to the Bureau of Criminal Identification:
(i) the employee's or applicant's personal identifying information and fingerprints for a criminal history search of applicable local, regional, and national databases; and
(ii) a request for all information received as a result of the local, regional, and nationwide background check.