UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
CFDA
10.557 SPECIAL SUPPLEMENTAL NUTRITION PROGRAM FOR WOMEN, INFANTS,
AND CHILDREN (WIC)
I.
PROGRAM OBJECTIVES
The objective
of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants
and Children (WIC) is to provide supplemental nutritious foods,
nutrition education, and referrals to health care for low-income
persons during critical periods of growth and development. Such
persons include low-income pregnant women, breast-feeding women
up to one year postpartum, non-breast-feeding women up to six months
postpartum, infants (persons under one year of age), and children
under age five determined to be at nutritional risk. Intervention
during the prenatal period improves fetal development and reduces
the incidence of low birth weight, short gestation, and anemia.
II.
PROGRAM PROCEDURES
WIC Program
regulations are found in 7 CFR part 246.
Administration
The U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA) Food and Consumer Service (FCS) administers
the WIC program through grants awarded to State health departments
or comparable State agencies, Indian tribal governments, bands or
intertribal councils, or groups recognized by the Bureau of Indian
Affairs, U.S. Department of the Interior, or the Indian Health Service
(IHS) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. These
WIC State agencies, in turn, award subgrants to local agencies to
certify applicants' eligibility for WIC program benefits and deliver
such benefits to eligible persons. Organizations eligible to serve
as WIC local agencies include public or private non-profit health
agencies, human service agencies which provide health services,
and IHS health units.
Funding
of WIC Program Costs
The WIC program
is a grant program that is 100 percent federally-funded (7 CFR sections
246.16(a), (b), and (c)). No State matching requirement exists.
Funds are awarded by FCS on the basis of funding formulas prescribed
in the WIC program regulations.
FCS allocates
federally-appropriated funds to WIC State agencies as grants which
are divided into two parts: a grant for food costs and a grant for
nutrition services and administrative (NSA) costs. The objectives
of the food grant funding formula are to provide program stability
by maintaining each State agency's prior year operating level and
to encourage program growth by providing a greater share of funds
to those State agencies receiving comparatively less than their
fair share of funds based on their WIC eligible population. The
NSA funding formula strives to preserve a reasonable measure of
funding stability, while promoting funding levels that provide equivalent
service to participants, and to promote incentives for reducing
food costs so that more persons may be served.
Resources available
to a State agency for program purposes under the two components
of its initial Federal WIC formula grant may be modified by the
cumulative effect of the following requirements:
Reallocations
and Recoveries
The WIC program's
authorizing statute and regulations require FCS to recover unspent
funds and reallocate them to State agencies.
Conversion
Authority
A State agency
that achieves WIC participation increases under a cost containment
strategy, as outlined under the "Cost Containment Requirements"
section below, in excess of the increases projected by FCS in the
NSA funds allocation formula, may shift a portion of its food grant
component to its NSA component. This "conversion authority" is a
function of the "excess" participation increase and is determined
by FCS.
Spending Options
Federal legislation
and regulations authorize a State agency to shift a portion of its
Federal WIC formula grant between grant periods (Federal fiscal
years).
Rebates
A State agency
may contract with a food manufacturer to receive a rebate on each
unit of the manufacturer's product purchased with food instruments
(FI) redeemed by program participants. Such rebates are credits
against prior expenditures made during the month in which the rebate
was earned for WIC food costs. Rebates held in State accounts are
exempt from the interest provisions of the Cash Management Improvement
Act (CMIA) and 31 CFR part 205.
Vendor
and Participant Collections
A State agency
is authorized to retain Federal program funds recovered through
claims action against vendors and participants and to use such recoveries
for program purposes. Like rebates, post-payment vendor and participant
collections are credits against prior expenditures for WIC food
costs. Such credits may be applied to expenditures for food in the
fiscal year in which the collection is received or in the fiscal
year in which the food instrument resulting in the collection was
issued. Pre-payment vendor collections are improper payments prevented,
not recoveries of food outlays. Therefore, they represent credits
to vendor billings, not prior expenditures. The State agency may
credit up to 100 percent of its vendor and participant collections
for NSA costs. This authority is in addition to the conversion authority
related to cost containment initiatives outlined above (Section
17(f)(23) of the Child Nutrition Act of 1966, as amended (42 USC
1786(f)(23).
Program
Income
Certain miscellaneous
receipts a State agency collects as the result of WIC program operations
are classified as program income (7 CFR 246.15).
State Funding
Although the
Federal financial participation (FFP) for WIC is 100 percent, some
States voluntarily appropriate funds from their own revenues to
extend WIC services beyond the level that could be supported by
Federal funding alone.
Certification
Applicants
for WIC program benefits are screened at WIC clinic sites to determine
whether they meet the eligibility criteria in the following categories:
categorical, residency, income, and nutritional risk (7 CFR sections
246.7(c), (d), (e), and (g)).
Benefits
The WIC program
provides participants with specific nutritious supplemental foods,
nutrition education, and health services referrals at no cost. The
authorized supplemental foods are prescribed from standard food
packages according to the category and nutritional need of the participant.
The seven food packages available are described in detail in WIC
program regulations (7 CFR section 246.10). In general, infants
receive iron-fortified formula, iron-fortified infant cereal, and
fruit juices high in vitamin C. Participating women and children
receive fortified milk and/or cheese, eggs, hot or cold cereals
high in iron, fruit and vegetable juices high in vitamin C, and
either peanut butter or dry beans/peas. In addition to these foods,
certain breast-feeding women also receive tuna, carrots, and both
peanut butter and dry beans/peas.
About 75 percent
of the WIC program's annual appropriation is used to provide WIC
participants with monthly food package benefits. The remainder is
used to provide additional benefits and to manage the program. Additional
benefits provided to WIC participants include nutrition education,
breast-feeding promotion and support activities, and client services,
such as diet and health assessments, referral services for other
health care and social services, and coordination activities.
Food
Benefit Delivery
Supplemental
foods are provided to participants in any one of the following three
ways (7 CFR section 246.12(b)):
Direct
Distribution (used only in Mississippi and parts of Illinois)
The State agency
and/or its agent purchases supplemental foods in bulk and issues
them to participants at designated distribution points.
Home Delivery
(used in Vermont and parts of Ohio)
Contractual
arrangements with dairies provide for the delivery of supplemental
foods directly to participants' homes.
Retail
Purchase System (used by most States)
Negotiable
food instruments (FIs) are issued directly to individual participants
and the participants exchange them for authorized supplemental foods
at retail stores. Two types of retail systems are used: voucher
systems and check systems. In a voucher system, the vendor submits
the voucher directly to the State agency for payment; in a check
system, vendors deposit checks to their bank accounts and the State
reimburses the banks. A participant must use an FI within 30 days
of its issuance date, and the vendor must submit the FI for payment
within 90 days of the issuance.
Each FI issued
to a participant must have a unique serial number. The State agency
is required to reconcile all redeemed FIs to issuance records (generally
created at the local agency level) by serial number within 150 days
of the first valid date for participant use.
A State agency
must adjust previously reported obligations for WIC food costs in
order to account for actual FI redemptions and other changes in
the status of FIs. A State agency is also subject to claims action
for the value of redeemed, unreconciled FIs. While the State agency
is required to reconcile all redeemed FIs to issuance records, FCS
may determine that the reconciliation process has been satisfactorily
completed if certain conditions have been met. These conditions
are: (1) the State can demonstrate that all reasonable management
efforts were devoted to achieving 100 percent reconciliation; and
(2) 99 percent or more of redeemed FIs were reconciled (7 CFR section
246.23(a)(4)).
Cost
Containment Requirements
In an effort
to use their food funding more efficiently, all WIC State agencies
in the 50 States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the
Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and most Indian Tribal State agencies
have implemented cost containment activities (7 CFR sections 246.16(j)
through (o)).
The Child Nutrition
and WIC Reauthorization Act of 1989 (Public Law 101-147), enacted
November 10, 1989, requires WIC State agencies to explore the feasibility
of implementing one of four acceptable cost containment initiatives:
competitive bidding, rebates, home delivery, or direct distribution.
A substantial portion of WIC's participation increases is attributable
to the success of cost containment measures. Reducing the average
food cost per person enables WIC to reach more participants with
a given amount of funds. The most successful strategy has been the
negotiation of competitive rebate contracts between State agencies
and infant formula companies. Such contracts provide for the State
agency to receive rebates on infant formula used in the program.
State
Responsibilities
A State administering
the WIC program must sign a Federal/State Agreement that commits
it to observe applicable laws and regulations in carrying out the
program (7 CFR section 246.3(c)). Section 17 of the Child Nutrition
Act of 1966 (42 USC 1786), the authorizing legislation for the WIC
Program, prescribes the basic goals of the WIC program. States are
required to establish an ongoing management evaluation system; to
conduct monitoring reviews of each local agency at least biennially,
including on-site reviews of 20 percent of the clinics in each local
agency; and to monitor 10 percent of their authorized vendors annually
(7 CFR section 246.12(i)). The State must also ensure corrective
action is taken in response to the detection of program deficiencies
and fully document the results of reviews and corrective action
plans. Monitoring of local agencies encompasses evaluation of management,
certification, nutrition education, civil rights compliance, accountability,
financial management systems, and food delivery systems (7 CFR section
246.19(b)).
State and local
agencies prepare a WIC Local Agency Directory Report (FCS-648),
updated as needed, to inform FCS of additions, deletions, or address
changes for the local agencies administering the WIC Program. FCS
uses the data to maintain and issue a current WIC Local Agency Directory.
This directory is used by FCS and State and local agencies to provide
potential Program participants with the correct name, address and
phone number of the nearest WIC local agency. FCS also uses this
information for mailings of publications and other important information.
Federal
Oversight and Compliance Mechanisms
FCS oversees
State operations through an organization consisting of headquarters
and seven regional offices. Federal program oversight encompasses
review of 11 functional areas of the program, including vendor management,
management information systems, funds management, certification
and eligibility, nutrition services, and food delivery/food instrument
accountability. Each year FCS Regional Offices evaluate one or more
of these areas or other related areas in those States that they
determine are in most need of review.
Although FCS
uses technical assistance extensively to promote improvements in
State operation of the WIC Program, enforcement mechanisms are also
present. The misuse of funds through State or local agency negligence
or fraud may result in the assessment of a claim (7 CFR section
246.23(a)). Claims may be established for funds lost due to food
instrument theft or embezzlements or for unreconciled food instruments
(7 CFR sections 246.23(a)(2) and (4)). FCS has other mechanisms
to recover other losses and the cost of negligence. For other forms
of noncompliance, FCS has the authority to give notice and, if improvements
do not occur, withhold administrative funds for failure to implement
program requirements (7 CFR section 246.19(a)(2)).
FCS has identified
the following circumstances that may be indicators of noncompliance
with WIC program requirements: (1) redeemed FIs which the issuing
local agencies had reported as voided or unclaimed; (2) a large
number of consecutively numbered, unreconciled FIs issued by the
same local agency; (3) FIs that appear to have been validly issued
and used but, nevertheless, fail to match existing issuance records;
and, (4) participants that redeemed all of their FIs on the same
day as they were issued.
III.
COMPLIANCE REQUIREMENTS
In
developing the audit procedures to test compliance with the requirements
for a Federal program, the auditor should first look to Part 2,
Matrix of Compliance Requirements, to identify which of the 14 types
of compliance requirements described in Part 3 are applicable and
then look to Parts 3 and 4 for the details of the requirements.
A.
Activities Allowed or Unallowed
Funds allocated
to a State agency for food must be expended to purchase supplemental
foods for participants or to redeem food instruments issued for
that purpose. Funds allocated for NSA must be used for the costs
incurred by the State or local agency to provide participants with
nutrition education, breast-feeding promotion and support, and referrals
to other social and medical service providers and to conduct participant
certification, caseload management, food benefit delivery, vendor
management, voter registration and program management (7 CFR sections
246.14(a) through (d)).
There are two
exceptions to the preceding rules. Funds allocated for NSA costs
but not needed for such costs may be applied to food costs (7 CFR
section 246.14(a)(2)). Funds allocated for food costs may be applied
to NSA costs as a result of exceeding participation levels projected
by the Federal funding formula and/or vendor/participant collections
(7 CFR sections 246.14(e) and 246.16(f)).
Under no circumstances
may the WIC grant be charged for costs which are demonstrably outside
the scope of the WIC program. The cost for some screening (exclusive
of laboratory tests), referrals for other medical/social services,
such as immunizations, prenatal (before birth)/perinatal (near the
time of birth from the 28th week of pregnancy through 28 days following
birth) care, well child care and/or family planning, and follow-up
on participants referred for such services, may be charged to the
Federal WIC grant. However, the cost of the services performed by
other health care/social service providers to which the participant
has been referred shall not be charged to the WIC grant. For example,
the cost to screen, refer, and follow-up on immunizations for WIC
participants may be charged to the WIC grant; but, the cost to administer
the shot, the vaccine, and vaccine-related equipment may not be
charged to the WIC grant.
B.
Allowable Costs/Cost Principles
Rebates, vendor
collections (post-payment vendor collections are funds collected
by the recovery of claims assessed against food vendors for errors
and overcharges; pre-payment vendor collections are improper payments
prevented as a result of reviews of food instruments prior to payment)
and participant collections (collections for improperly issued food
benefits as the result of a participant, guardian or caretaker intentionally
making a false or misleading statement or withholding information)
are credits against vendor billings or prior expenditures. A State
agency must recognize, use, and account for these items in accordance
with program regulations. A State agency's failure to do so could
result in overclaims against its Federal WIC grant and in cash management
problems.
C.
Cash Management
The WIC program
is subject to the provisions of the Cash Management Improvement
Act (CMIA); however, rebates are exempt from the interest provisions
of the CMIA and its implementing regulations (Section 17(h)(8)(iii)(L)
of the Child Nutrition Act) (42 USC 1786(h)(8)(iii)(L)).
E.
Eligibility
1.
Eligibility for Individuals
Applicants
for WIC Program benefits are screened at WIC clinic sites to determine
whether they meet the following eligibility criteria (7 CFR sections
246.7(c), (d), (e) and (g)).
a. Categorical
Eligibility is restricted to pregnant, postpartum, and breast-feeding
women, infants, and children up to their fifth birthday (7 CFR sections
246.2 (definition of each category) and 246.7(c)).
b. Residency
An applicant must meet the State agency's residency requirement.
Except in the case of Indian State agencies, the applicant must
reside in the jurisdiction of the State. Indian State agencies may
require applicants to reside within their jurisdiction. All State
agencies may designate service areas for any local agency, and may
require that applicants reside within the service area (7 CFR section
246.7(c)(1)).
c. Income
An applicant must meet an income standard established by the State
agency or be determined to be automatically income-eligible based
on documentation of his/her eligibility, or certain family members'
eligibility, for the following Federal programs: (1) Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families (formerly Aid To Families With Dependent Children);
(2) Medicaid; or (3) Food Stamps, i.e., adjunctive income-eligible.
State agencies may also determine an individual automatically income-eligible
based on his/her eligibility for certain State-administered programs
(7 CFR sections 246.2 (definition of "family"), 246.7(c), and 246.7(d)).
Income
Guidelines: The income standard established by the State agency
may be up to 185 percent of the income poverty guidelines issued
annually by the Department of Health and Human Services or State
or local income guidelines used for free and reduced-price health
care. However, in using health care guidelines, the income guidelines
for WIC must be between 100 and 185 percent of poverty guidelines.
Local agency income guidelines may vary as long as they are based
on the guidelines used for free and reduced-price health care (7
CFR section 246.7(d)(1)).
Income
Determination: Except for applicants determined automatically
income-eligible, income is based on gross income and other cash
readily available to the family or economic unit. Certain Federal
payments and benefits are excluded from the computation of income.
In addition, the State agency may exclude the value of military
families' off-base housing allowances but must implement such exclusion
uniformly for all military families (7 CFR section 246.7(d)(2)(iv)).
At a minimum,
in-stream (away from home base) migrant farm workers and their families
with expired Verification of Certification cards shall meet the
State agency's income standard provided that the income of the family
is determined at least once every 12 months (7 CFR section 246.7(d)(2)(viii)).
An Indian State
agency, or a State agency acting on behalf of an Indian local agency,
may submit reliable data that proves to FCS that the majority of
Indian households in a local agency service area have incomes at
or below the State agency's income guidelines. In such cases, FCS
may authorize the State agency to permit the use of an abbreviated
income screening process whereby an applicant affirms, in writing,
that its family income is within the State agency's prescribed guidelines.
State agencies
may instruct local agencies to consider family income over the preceding
12 months or the family's current rate of income, whichever indicator
more accurately reflects the family's income status. However, applicants
in which an adult member is unemployed shall have income determined
based on the period of unemployment. A State or local agency may
require verification of information which it determines necessary
to confirm income eligibility.
d. Nutritional
Risk A competent professional authority (e.g., physician,
nutritionist, registered nurse, or other health professional) must
determine that the applicant is at nutritional risk. Nutritional
risk is defined by each State agency within broad guidelines set
forth in WIC legislation and regulations. At a minimum, this determination
must be based on measurement of height or length and weight, and
on a hematological test for anemia. Such anemia testing is required
of all applicants except infants under six months of age and, at
the State or local agency's discretion, children who are determined
to be within the normal range at their last certification. The determination
of nutritional risk may be based on referral data provided by a
competent professional authority who is not on the WIC staff (7
CFR sections 246.2 (definitions of competent professional authority
and nutritional risk) and 246.7(e)).
When an applicant
meets all eligibility criteria, he/she is determined by WIC clinic
staff to be eligible for program benefits. Certification periods
are assigned to each participant based on categorical status for
women, infants, and children (7 CFR section 246.7(g)).
A WIC local
agency assigns each eligible person a priority classification according
to the classification system described in 7 CFR section 246.7(e)(4).
A person's priority assignment reflects the severity of his/her
nutritional risk. If the local agency cannot immediately place the
person on the program for lack of an available caseload slot, the
person is placed on a waiting list. Caseload vacancies are filled
from the waiting list in priority classification order. State agencies
are expected to target program outreach and caseload management
efforts toward persons at greatest nutritional risk (i.e., those
in the highest priority classifications).
Pregnant women
are certified for the duration of their pregnancy and for up to
six weeks postpartum. Breast-feeding women may be certified for
six-month intervals ending with the breast-fed infant's first birthday.
Infants are certified at intervals of approximately six months,
except that infants under six months of age may be certified for
a period extending up to the child's first birthday, provided the
quality and accessibility of health care services are not diminished.
Children are certified for six-month intervals ending with the month
in which the child reaches the fifth birthday. Non-breast-feeding
women are certified for up to six months postpartum.
2.
Eligibility for Group of Individuals or Area of Service Delivery
- Not Applicable
3.
Eligibility of Subrecipients
A State agency
may award WIC subgrants only to organizations meeting the definition
of "local agency" in 7 CFR section 246.2. Such organizations are
identified under "Program Procedures" above.
H.
Period of Availability of Federal Funds
A State agency
may spend up to 1 percent of its total WIC formula grant for food
costs of the fiscal year preceding and/or food or NSA costs of the
fiscal year following the fiscal year for which the grant was awarded.
This feature, known as "backspend" and "spendforward," is unique
to the WIC Program. Under certain conditions related to cost containment
strategies, a State agency may spend forward a maximum of 3 or 5
percent and/or backspend a maximum of 3 percent of its formula food
grant award. The 3 percent backspend and the 3 and 5 percent spendforward
provisions incorporate, and are not in addition to the 1 percent
backspend/spendforward provisions. A State agency's total spending
options may never exceed 3 or 5 percent, as applicable, of its food
grant (7 CFR section 246.16(b)(3)) (Section 17(I)(3) of the Child
Nutrition Act) (42 USC 1786(I)(3)).
I.
Procurement and Suspension and Debarment
1.
Procurement
FCS authorizes
WIC State and local agencies to purchase equipment having a cost
of less than the threshold established by FCS without prior approval
from FCS. This policy does not apply to purchases of automated data
processing (ADP) equipment with a unit cost less than $25,000, if
the equipment is related to a multi-unit procurement with a total
project cost (including equipment, software and/or contracted services
costs) of $25,000 or more, such as a statewide automation system
or a large replacement plan. Such purchases continue to require
prior approval from FCS (see ADP Projects).
This policy
relieves WIC State agencies of submitting requests for prior approval
of relatively small equipment purchases which have traditionally
been accepted to be reasonable and necessary to conduct WIC program
operations, such as copiers, vehicles, and personal computers and
monitors required for individual work stations.
ADP Projects
FCS authorizes
WIC State agencies to make ADP acquisitions with a total project
cost of up to $24,999 without prior FCS approval. Instead, WIC State
agencies must notify the FCS Regional Office in writing of such
purchases within 60 days of the expenditure or contract execution.
ADP acquisitions with a total project cost of $25,000 to $499,999
require a written request for prior approval from the FCS Regional
Office, including an explanation of the purchase(s), description
of needs, and other information appropriate to the proposed acquisition
(cost allocation, procurement documents, etc, as appropriate).
WIC State agencies
are required to submit an Advanced Planning Document (APD) to request
prior approval of automation acquisitions with a total project cost
of $500,000 or more. Prior approval from FCS is required for such
costs to be allowable charges to the WIC grant (7 CFR section 3016.22).
Purchases of
other capital assets, such as buildings, land and improvements to
buildings or land that materially increase their value or useful
life, costing more than $5000, continue to require prior approval
from FCS.
2.
Suspension and Debarment
There are no
provisions unique to this program. Refer to Part 3 of the Compliance
Supplement for these requirements.
J.
Program Income
Program income
is to be treated as a credit against prior expenditures. Currently,
the following are the only funds FCS is aware of that WIC State
agencies receive that are classified as program income: (1) royalties
from printed publications; (2) nominal fees, not to exceed costs,
for reproducing or mailing publications, videotapes, posters, etc.;
(3) interest earned on rebate funds for infant formula and other
foods; and, (4) general grants not tied directly to foods redeemed,
but made for inclusion of food items in a State's food package (such
as Welch's grants). A State agency may use program income for any
combination of food and NSA costs (7 CFR section 246.15(b)).
L.
Reporting
1.
Financial Reporting
The WIC program
does not use the standard financial reports.
a. SF-269,
Financial Status Report - Not Applicable
b SF-270, Request
for Advance or Reimbursement - Not Applicable
c. SF-271,
Outlay Report and Request for Reimbursement for Construction
Program - Not Applicable
d. SF-272,
Federal Cash Transaction Report - Not Applicable
e. FCS-227,
WIC Program Annual Closeout Report (OMB No. 0584-0427) - This
report replaces the annual SF-269, Financial Status Report, as the
official document used by WIC State agencies to provide the data
needed by FCS to conduct the annual reconciliation and closeout
of grants which is required by 7 CFR section 3016. The FCS-227 discloses
WIC program funds and costs according to WIC's two grant components,
food and NSA. The FCS-227 presents the status of the report year
grant and costs adjusted by the spending options unique to WIC which
allow a small portion of WIC grant funds to be shifted between Federal
fiscal years. The FCS-227 is the State's official validation of
the final status of its grant and costs for the report year.
Key Line Items
- The following line items contain critical information:
1. Line 9 Gross
Outlays and Unliquidated Obligations For Report Year Program Costs
- reflects the total of the State agency's outlays and unliquidated
obligations for report year WIC program costs.
2. Line 10a
Rebates - reflects the total annual credit to the Federal
grant as a result of rebates collected.
3. Line 10b
Program Income - reflects the total amount of gross income
received by the State directly generated by a grant-supported activity,
or earned only as a result of the grant agreement during the grant
period.
4. Line 10c
Vendor/Participant Collections - reflects the amount of
post-payment vendor collections (i.e., funds collected by the recovery
of claims assessed against food vendors for errors and overcharges)
and participant collections. Pre-payment vendor collections are
not reported in this line as they represent credits to vendor billings,
not credits to gross expenditures. Participant collections are funds
collected for improperly issued food benefits as the result of a
participant, guardian or caretaker making a false or misleading
statement or withholding information.
f. FCS-227A,
Addendum to WIC Program Annual Closeout Report - NSA Expenditures
(OMB No. 0584-0427) - The FCS-227A is prepared annually
by State agencies to report (1) NSA expenditures by function for
the fiscal year being closed out (2) the method by which NSA expenditures
were charged as indirect costs, and (3) the method by which the
indirect cost amount was determined. FCS uses the amounts reported
in nutrition education and breast-feeding promotion and support,
two of the four functional categories on the FCS-227A, to determine
whether the State agencies met the statutory minimum spending level
for those functions.
Key Line Items
- The following line items and columns contain critical information
for State-level activities.
1. Line 5a
Federal Outlays - Column (03) - State-Level Nutrition
Education -represents total outlays and unliquidated obligations
made for State-level nutrition education costs supported by Federal
grant funds and program income.
2. Line 5a
Federal Outlays - Column (04) - State-Level Breast-feeding
Promotion and Support - represents total outlays and unliquidated
obligations made for State-level breast-feeding promotion and support
costs supported by Federal grant funds and program income.
3. Line 5b
State Outlays - Column (03) - State-Level Nutrition
Education -represents total outlays and unliquidated obligations
made for State-level nutrition education costs supported by State-appropriated
funds plus the dollar value of any in-kind contributions received
from any Federal, State or local funding source.
4. Line 5b
State Outlays - Column (04) - State-Level Breast-feeding
Promotion and Support - represents total outlays and unliquidated
obligations made for State-level breast-feeding promotion and support
costs supported by State-appropriated funds plus the dollar value
of any in-kind contributions received from any Federal, State or
local funding source.
Key Line Items
- The following line items and columns contain critical information
for local-level activities - Outlays and unliquidated obligations
made by local agencies or made by the State agency for local clinics
or other units in local communities which directly provide benefits
to participants.
1. Line 5a
Federal Outlays - Column (07) - Local-Level Nutrition
Education - represents total outlays and unliquidated obligations
made for local-level nutrition education costs supported by Federal
grant funds and program income.
2. Line 5a
Federal Outlays - Column (08) - Local-Level Breast-feeding
Promotion and Support - represents total outlays and unliquidated
obligations made for local-level breast-feeding promotion and support
costs supported by Federal grant funds and program income.
3. Line 5b
State outlays - Column (07) - Local-Level Nutrition
Education -represents total outlays and unliquidated obligations
made for local-level nutrition education costs supported by State-appropriated
funds plus the dollar value of any in-kind contributions received
from any Federal, State or local funding source.
4. Line 5b
State outlays - Column (08) - Local-Level Breast-feeding
Promotion and Support - represents total outlays and unliquidated
obligations made for local-level breast-feeding promotion and support
costs supported by State-appropriated funds plus the dollar value
of any in-kind contributions received from any Federal, State or
local funding source.
(Refer to 7
CFR section 246.14(c))
g. FSC-498,
WIC Monthly Financial Management and Participation Report (OMB
No. 0584-0045) - A State agency is required to submit monthly
financial and program performance (participation) data (7 CFR section
246.25(b)).
Each WIC State
agency uses the FCS-498 to report projected and actual Federal food
expenditures and participation for each month of the fiscal year.
Participation for any given month equals the number of individuals
who received supplemental foods or food instruments during that
month plus the number of infants who received no supplemental foods
or food instruments, but were breast-fed by participating women
during that month.
The FCS-498
also reports actual NSA expenditures and unliquidated obligations
and the source of funds available to support both food and NSA expenditures.
The reporting of State-supported food expenditures and participation
is optional. The States and FCS use this information for program
monitoring, funds management, budget projections, monitoring caseload,
policy development, and responding to requests from Congress and
the interested public.
Key Line Items
- The following line items contain critical information:
1. Line 1 Gross
Obligation - reflects the amount of money, net of vendor and
participant collections and program income, used to fund food outlays
that a State agency estimates it will spend for each month's food
orders or FI issuances.
2. Line 2 Estimated
Rebate - reflects the amount of money that a State agency estimates
it will receive for rebates.
3. Line 4 Actual
Outlays - reflects the amount of payments for redeemed food
instruments or the total amount of redeemed documents approved by
the WIC program for payment, minus vendor and participant collections
and program income used to fund food outlays for the report month.
The State's WIC program food cost ledger account should support
this amount.
4. Line 5 Rebates
Billed - reflects the dollar value of bills or invoices submitted
by the State to food manufacturers, such as infant formula companies,
for rebate payments.
5. Line 11
Total Federal Participation - reflects the actual number
of federally-supported participants for elapsed months. The participation
counts should be supported by FI issuance records and participant
files.
6. Line 16c
Total Year-to-Date Administrative Costs - reflects cumulative
year-to-date payments made for WIC program NSA costs incurred up
to the report month minus those payments funded with program income.
2.
Performance Reporting - Not Applicable
3.
Special Reporting - Not Applicable
N.
SPECIAL TESTS AND PROVISIONS
1.
One-to-One Reconciliation
Compliance
Requirement - A State agency must reconcile all redeemed
FIs to issuance records within 150 days of the FI's first valid
date for participant use. The State agency must determine whether
each redeemed FI was: (1) validly issued and validly used; (2) used
after being lost, stolen, or voided; (3) validly issued but used
outside its valid use dates; (4) used pursuant to a duplicate issuance
(either two FIs bearing the same serial number or a participant
receiving duplicate benefits); or, (5) otherwise not matching issuance
records. State agencies generally do this by analyzing computer
reports that provide detailed issuance and redemption information
on each FI redeemed (7 CFR section 246.12(n)(1)).
Audit
Objective - Determine whether the State agency's FI reconciliation
process complies with the one-to-one reconciliation requirement.
Suggested
Audit Procedures
a. Obtain an
understanding of the State agency's process for reconciling redeemed
FIs. At a minimum, this includes determining how the State agency:
(1) Identifies
the ultimate disposition of every redeemed FI; and
(2) Follows
up on redeemed FIs that cannot be matched with valid issuances (State
agencies do this by contacting the issuing local agencies and by
other means).
b. Determine
whether written guidance on how to follow up on unreconciled FIs
exists for local agencies.
c. Determine
through inspection of reconciliation reports that the State agency:
(1) Reconciled
its records to issued FIs on a one-to-one basis within the 150 day
time frame set by regulation;
(2) Followed-up
on FIs that were not validly issued and validly used, in order to
determine their ultimate disposition;
(3) Obtained
explanations for identified discrepancies; and
(4) Adjusted
its accounting records and external reports in order to reflect
the results of the reconciliation process.
d. Using State
agency reconciliation reports for the last month of the audit period,
verify the State agency's non-reconciliation rate. The non-reconciliation
rate should not exceed one percent. The State agency should use
the following steps in performing the non-reconciliation rate calculation:
(1) Determine
total FIs redeemed
(2) Determine
total redeemed FIs initially identified as unreconciled (listed
as redeemed with no record of issuance on exception report)
(3) Determine
total redeemed FIs finally identified as unreconciled (after follow-up
with local agencies/clinics)
(4) Calculate
the unreconciled rate (#3 divided by #1)
(5) Calculate
total value of FIs redeemed
(6) Calculate
total value of FIs finally identified as unreconciled
2.
Management Evaluations
Compliance
Requirement - State agencies must establish an ongoing
management evaluation system which includes at least the monitoring
of local agency operations, the review of local agency financial
and participation reports, the development of corrective action
plans, the monitoring of the implementation of corrective action
plans, and on-site visits. Monitoring of the local agencies shall
include evaluation of management, certification, nutrition education,
civil rights compliance, accountability, financial management systems,
and food delivery systems. These reviews must be conducted on each
local agency at least once every two years, including on-site reviews
of a minimum of 20 percent of the clinics in each local agency or
one clinic, whichever is greater (7 CFR section 246.19(b)).
Audit
Objective - Determine whether the State agency has conducted
the required local agency management reviews and that the local
agency management reviews cover the required areas.
Suggested
Audit Procedures
a. Ascertain
that the State agency conducts the required local agency management
reviews, including on-site visits of a minimum of 20 percent of
the clinics in each local agency or one clinic, whichever is greater.
b. Ascertain
that the local agency management reviews include required areas.
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