Otago Daily Times

Auditor finds 60 schools misbehavin­g

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WELLINGTON: More than 60 schools broke laws and regulation­s last year, and a further 44 had such bad financial problems the Education Ministry had to promise to underwrite them, an auditor report has revealed.

The Auditorgen­eral’s report on the audits of schools’ 2017 accounts said some were repeat offenders, including three that loaned money to staff.

Other problems included a school that wrote off $26,000 in unsold school uniform items, a secondary school that took a loan with a 20% interest rate, and another that did not seek recovery of a $21,000 overpaymen­t to a former staff member.

The report said more schools were exceeding the amount they could borrow without the ministry’s permission, because they entered leases for IT and copying equipment that was in effect a loan.

It said auditors spotted serious financial problems at 44 schools and would not confirm them as ongoing concerns until the Education Ministry confirmed it would pay their debts if necessary.

It said some schools did not understand their financial responsibi­lities and some were not planning their building maintenanc­e properly.

‘‘If a board does not properly plan for its property maintenanc­e needs, there is a risk that it may spend the funding provided for maintenanc­e on other items. This can result in a decline in the condition of school property.

‘‘There is also an effect on financial reporting, as the school’s financial statements may not reflect its obligation­s for maintenanc­e and therefore the school’s true financial position.’’

The report said auditors issued modified opinions for 27 sets of accounts, 15 for last year and 12 for previous years.

It said auditors found problems with the 2015, 2016 and 2017 accounts of Auckland’s AlMadinah School, which RNZ

News last month reported was undergoing a forensic accounting audit.

‘‘We were unable to express an opinion on the 2016 and 2017 financial statements of AlMadinah School,’’ the report said.

‘‘There were limited controls and scrutiny over payments for these years. In particular, there was inadequate documentat­ion

to support some payments, and some payments seemed excessive for their stated purpose.

Because of this, we were unable to get enough audit evidence to form an opinion.’’

There were also problems with the the 2015 financial statements of Te Kura Kaupapa Maori o Takapau.

‘‘We were unable to form an opinion because we were unable to obtain enough evidence about bank accounts, revenue and expenditur­e accounts receivable or expenditur­e and accounts payable.

‘‘This is because a staff member set up bank accounts outside the control of the Board of Trustees, which resulted in the suspected misuse of school funds during the year.’’

The report said kura kaupapa Maori were overrepres­ented among schools that reported their results late and had poor financial policies, despite the Office of the Auditorgen­eral calling for improvemen­ts in 2010.

It said 126 school audits were overdue, including two schools that each had four years of audits outstandin­g.

The report said Mana Tamariki decided not to seek recovery of a 2016 overpaymen­t to an employee of about $21,000, even though the school was in financial difficulty.

It said Tahatai Coast School last year made a trading loss of $71,438, which included writing off more than $26,000 of uniform inventory after it decided to change the school uniform from 2020.

The report named three schools that spent government funding on overseas travel, including for the second year in a row Blockhouse Bay Intermedia­te which spent $23,000 on a trip to South Korea for 21 children and three teachers.

It said Te Kura Kaupapa Maori o Nga Uri a Maui spent $32,401 on a fourday planning meeting in the Gold Coast, Australia for which teachers paid $10,013 for travel.

Te Whata Tau o Putauaki spent $47,639 to send five students, four teachers, and one caregiver to the World Indigenous Peoples Conference on Education in Canada. The money was in addition to student fundraisin­g of $53,219.

The report said the ministry had told schools they could pay for travel if it had an educationa­l purpose. — RNZ

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