By Jim Garamone DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10, 2018 — A departmentwide audit is
important for business reform, for Congress and for the taxpayer, the Defense
Department’s comptroller told the House Armed Services Committee today.
The process has started for the first departmentwide audit
in DoD history, David L. Norquist said. Defense is the largest department in
the executive branch and has assets around the world.
Defense Secretary James N. Mattis and Deputy Defense Secretary
Patrick M. Shanahan are fully behind this effort, Norquist told the committee.
While the department has auditors looking at various
contracts or processes, “this is the first time the department will undergo a
full financial statement audit,” he said. “A financial statement audit is
comprehensive and occurs annually and it covers more than financial
management.”
Audit’s Purpose
This audit will verify the count, location and condition of
military equipment and real property. “It tests the vulnerability of our
security systems and it validates the accuracy of personnel records and
actions,” Norquist said.
The department will have 1,200 financial statement auditors
assessing the books and records to develop a true account of the state of the
department, the comptroller said. It will take time to pass all the process and
system changes necessary to pass the audit and get a so-called “clean opinion,”
he said. He noted that it took the Department of Homeland Security -- a much
smaller and newer agency -- 10 years to get a clean audit.
“But we don’t have to wait to see the benefits of a clean
opinion,” Norquist said. “The financial statement audit helps drive enterprise
improvements to standardize our business practices and improve the quality of
our data.”
The audit will provide information and accountability to the
American people. “The taxpayers deserve the same level of confidence as a
shareholder that DoD’s financial statement presents a true and accurate picture
of its financial condition and operations,” he said. “Transparency,
accountability and business process reform are some of the benefits of a
financial statement audit.”
An audit will improve accountability, the comptroller said,
noting that, for example, an initial Army audit found that 39 UH-60 Black Hawk
helicopters were not properly recorded in the property system. “The Air Force
identified 478 structures and buildings at 12 installations that were not in
its real property system,” he added.
The audit should cost about $367 million in 2018, Norquist
said, which is about the same percentage of the overall budget that large firms
like Proctor and Gamble or IBM spend on their audits. “We also anticipate
spending about $551 million in 2018 fixing problems identified by the
auditors,” he said.
Finding better ways to do business will allow DoD to invest
in greater lethality for the force, the comptroller said
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