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Auditor Gives FCC Finances Generally Clean Bill of Health, With Some Concerns

FCC financial statements received generally good marks from an independent auditor’s report in the commission’s FY 2015 Agency Financial Report (AFR) released Thursday. Kearney & Co. found the statements “present fairly, in all material respects” the FCC’s financial position as…

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of Sept. 30 in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The accounting firm did find “one repeat material weakness, originally reported in FY 2014, in internal control” regarding Universal Service Administrative Co. budgetary accounting, “one repeat significant deficiency” going back 10 years related to IT controls, and “one repeat instance of noncompliance with laws and regulations related to the requirements of the Debt Collection Improvement Act,” said FCC Inspector General David Hunt in an introductory memorandum. “The independent auditor’s opinion addresses more than $10.1 billion in revenues, more than $460 million in FCC operating expenses and more than $9.2 billion in outlays for the Universal Service Fund and Telecommunications Relay Service Fund,” said FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler in an AFR message. “Despite the positive audit opinion, the independent auditor’s report shows that work remains at the FCC to continue to improve the agency’s operations.” The $10.1 billion revenue includes: some $8.77 billion from USF, $847 million from the TRS Fund, $340 million from appropriations (regulatory fees), $106 million from auction-related appropriations, $6 million from North American Numbering Plan revenue, and $7 million from “other” sources, according to an “FCC management” overview. Wheeler highlighted FCC work on spectrum, net neutrality, transactions, Lifeline and E-rate USF support, robocalls, empowering people with disabilities, process reform, and field and IT modernization. He voiced confidence the FCC is on “sound legal footing” in net neutrality litigation and he noted the agency raised more than $40 billion in AWS-3 auction revenue. He said field activities “presented real challenges and opportunities for improvement,” given technological change since the last Enforcement Bureau field structure review and given a reduction in FCC resources. “The Commission adopted a field modernization plan that will allow our field operations to do more with less,” he said. “The resulting plan reflects the review team’s thorough, data-driven analysis and concentrates field resources where they are needed most -- areas with the greatest spectrum density. … Once implemented, this plan will save millions of dollars annually.” Wheeler also said the FCC's IT team "is on track to modernize our infrastructure, information and communications technologies," replacing costly-to-maintain legacy systems and "leveraging cloud service offerings to the fullest extent possible."