Linda Combs | OMB banking on financial upgrades
Connecting state and local government leaders
When President Bush nominated Linda Combs to be the next Office of Management and Budget controller, the confirmation process was almost second nature to her.
Linda Combs, government's accountability manager
GCN: A lot of progress has been made over the last four years on agency financial management. What are your priorities in the short term?
- Increase the number of agencies receiving an unqualified audit opinion on their financial statements. Last fiscal year, 18 of the 24 Chief Financial Officers Act agencies received unqualified opinions on their financial statements.
- Have all 24 agencies submit their financial statements by the reporting deadline of Nov. 15. Last fiscal year, 22 of the 24 CFO Act agencies completed their financial statements by Nov. 15.
- Strengthen management accountability for internal control by implementing the revised financial control requirements in the [Office of Management and Budget Circular] A-123, which are similar to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act requirements for managers of publicly traded companies.
- Increase the number of agencies that have modern financial systems that support program management and are in substantial compliance with the Federal Financial Management Improvement Act.
GCN: And the long term?
GCN: Your predecessor, Linda Springer, led the Grants Management Line of Business effort. What will your involvement be and what are the next steps? I've heard it has been dormant since last January.
GCN: How will your office, or the CFO Council, help agencies make an easy transition to the financial management centers of excellence under the Financial Management LOB?
- Having meetings, briefings, and other discussion forums with the CFO, CIO, and acquisition communities.
- Incorporating systems and business process initiatives, as appropriate, into the various requirements of the President's Management Agenda.
- Modifying OMB policy and guidance as necessary to support the consolidation and standardization approaches.
GCN: What are the next steps to continue to decrease the amount of improper payments agencies are making?GCN: Does the administration support Congressman Todd Platts' (R-Pa.) effort to consolidate the amount of legislative financial requirements placed on agencies?
COMBS: The administration is extremely supportive of the effort to consolidate and streamline the legislative financial requirements placed on agencies.
The administration has emphasized the need to integrate current statutory and regulatory requirements placed on agencies in the revised OMB Circular A-123, Management's Responsibility for Internal Control.
GCN: In the PMA score cards, financial management has the most red scores. What is your office doing to improve agency scores? In what areas are agencies facing the biggest challenges?
COMBS: Agencies are making steady progress in meeting the PMA's financial management standards of success. What sets the financial management initiative apart from other initiatives is that a majority of the yellow standards of success are based on what is reported in the annual financial statement audit.
However, if an agency fails to meet a yellow standard of success, it must prepare and submit a corrective action plan on how it will meet that standard. OMB monitors corrective actions quarterly, and progress ratings typically reflect whether an agency is proceeding according to its plan of action.
Areas requiring the most attention include resolving long-standard material weaknesses by strengthening internal controls over financial reporting, as well as implementing modern financial systems to support program management and accountability needs.
GCN: Now that you've been through the confirmation process five times, what's the best part of it?
COMBS: Finishing it for the fifth time and being able to begin work!
NEXT STORY: Incoming