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Published byJocelyn Rich Modified over 9 years ago
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THE FLORIDA DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT FLORIDA DEOBLIGATIONS AND RECOUPMENTS BRYAN W. KOON DIRECTOR JUNE 17, 2014
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THE FLORIDA DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT SCOPE OF PROBLEM 2010 – a $7 million issue was noted in the Governor’s Transition Report 2014 – currently more than $100 million issue Primarily driven by 2004-2005 hurricanes
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THE FLORIDA DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT PRIMARY CAUSES Accounting (58.4%) Contracting (26.3%) Procurement (15.3%) Duplication of Benefits (14.0%) Closeouts (11.6%) Insurance (9.1%) Force Account Labor & Equipment (8.2%)
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THE FLORIDA DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT Reimbursement model Long-time frame for projects + 3 years Large dollar value = big target Increasing federal scrutiny Personnel turnover EXACERBATING FACTORS
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THE FLORIDA DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT Increased funding for DHS OIG Lack of permanent DHS OIG Lack of coordination between DHS and FEMA Document retention Length of appeals process EXACERBATING FACTORS
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THE FLORIDA DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT COMPLICATING FACTORS Deobligated funds must be recouped to pay future claims Money is withdrawn from Smartlink Account immediately Appeals process can take years
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THE FLORIDA DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS ENACTED New DHS Secretary and IG New FEMA Recovery Chief SRIA Improvements Procurement Assistance Teams More Senior FEMA Leadership Involvement
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THE FLORIDA DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT FUTURE SOLUTIONS AND ISSUES NEMA group FAC, FL League of Cities, others Court cases Legislative action for funding ICCOH model Appeals process correction Unknown – current debt issue
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