City finds $2.7 million bookkeeping error
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The city did not save as much as it originally
thought during the 1999-2000 fiscal year.
Huntington Beach officials said an oversight in payroll posting during
December 1999 led city departments to think they had a total of about
$2.7 million in unspent funds. Although the payroll, one of three that
month, was deducted from the city’s general ledger, records of individual
department expenses were not distributed accordingly.
“We are still seeing if we can backtrack this to find the cause,”
Huntington Beach Finance Officer Dan Villella said.
The city recently discovered the mistake in January while studying
financial records for an annual audit by the independent firm Deihl Evans
and Co. LLP, and have already updated departmental records. The audit,
required for all cities by law, typically takes between four and six
months, and began after the fiscal year closed in September, said
officials at the auditing firm.
Villella said he believes the payroll posting error went unnoticed
because of its timing.
The city pays its employees 26 times a year, usually twice a month.
December 1999 was one of two months in the year when employees receive
three checks instead of two because of the pay schedule.
“On the surface, the numbers may have looked right because there were
at least two payrolls that month,” Villella said. “Had the error happened
in a shorter month, it would have been much more noticeable.”
City officials had budgeted more than $200 million for the 1999-2000
fiscal year. The city came in under budget, a factor that is unchanged
despite the error, they added.
Nitin Patel, a partner with the auditing firm in its fourth year as
the city’s independent auditor, said Huntington Beach has a history of
bookkeeping excellence.
“In each of the first three years that we did the audits, the city
received awards from the Government Finance Officers Assn.,” he said,
adding that the awards commend exemplary financial management. “And the
city received the same honor for a number of years before we took on the
auditing role.”
The city has been recognized by the association for about 20
consecutive years, city officials added.
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