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New Audit Sheds Light on How Wisconsin Handled Federal Money in the Last Budget

Tuesday, April 1st, 2025 -- 12:01 PM

(Joe Schulz, Wisconsin Public Radio) As Wisconsin grapples with an uncertain future when it comes to federal funding, a new audit sheds some light on how the state handled federal money in the last budget.

The nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau released a report Friday that shows state agencies administered $18.6 billion in federal financial assistance in the 2023-24 fiscal year.

The state’s federal assistance was broken down into nearly $17 billion in “cash assistance,” $1.6 billion in “noncash assistance” and $47.5 million in outstanding loan balances, the report said.

The audit also found compliance issues with state agencies financial reporting and record keeping, as well as their use of some funds. It included more than 100 recommendations to agencies to address those issues.

Jason Stein, president of the Wisconsin Policy Forum, said the annual report tracks billions of federal dollars that flow through dozens of programs. “There’s going to be some issues, inevitably, every year,” he said. “And the audit is an important part of keeping those processes as tight as possible.”

According to the report, Wisconsin spent $2.3 billion in federal funds related to the COVID-19 health emergency in the 2023-24 fiscal year. The largest portion of those expenses was $1.1 billion related to the Education Stabilization Fund program.

Stein said the state will no longer be able to draw from those pandemic-related federal funds as officials work to craft future state budgets in 2025 and beyond. “Local governments and school districts are in the same boat,” he said. “That’s a significant change.”

Stein also said it’s still unclear what changes could be coming to other federally-funded programs like Medicaid or food stamps. He said the state of the economy is also another “big source of uncertainty” for state officials as they craft the next budget.

“That’s, I think, probably the No. 1 thing that people who are trying to craft the state budget are watching,” Stein said. “Is there going to be any impact to state tax revenues from all of this? Or impact to the unemployment rate, which could drive up the use of programs like Medicaid?”

The report also included 101 recommendations to state agencies aimed at addressing “internal control deficiencies” in their financial reporting and record keeping.

They range from asking the Department of Administration to implement new procedures to assess internal controls to asking the Department of Public Instruction to develop written policies for complying with federal requirements.

In a statement, state Rep. Robert Wittke, R-Caledonia, who co-chairs the Legislative Audit Committee, said he was “disturbed” by the issues around financial record-keeping in the report.

The Legislative Audit Bureau also questioned $36.1 million in expenditures that agencies “charged inappropriately” to federal funds. The largest chunk of those were related to a summer food stamps program for children that the Department of Health Services launched in the 2023-24 fiscal year.


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