WEST virginia legislature
2019 regular session
Committee Substitute
for
House Bill 2439
By Delegates Maynard, Azinger, Cooper, Jennings, Lovejoy, Miller, Sponaugle, and Sypolt
[Originating in the Committee on Government Organization, February 13, 2019]
A BILL to amend and reenact §8-15-8b of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended; to amend and reenact §12-4-14 of said code; to amend said code by adding thereto a new section, designated §12-4-14b; and to amend and reenact §29-3-5f of said code, all relating to fire service equipment and training funds for volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies and departments; authorizing fire departments to file bank statements and check images instead of sworn statements of expenditures; prohibiting the commingling of funds; requiring retention of payment records; defining terms; changing deadline dates; authorizing forfeiture and redistribution of funds of delinquent fire departments; prohibiting the conversion of funds through returns or refunds of goods or services; providing for deductions from quarterly distributions to offset improper expenditures by a fire company or department; clarifying the responsibility for proposing legislative rules; requiring written notifications of delinquencies and misapplications of funds; providing a procedure to contest findings of Legislative Auditor; removing certain criminal penalties; and updating outdated language.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
CHAPTER 8. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS.
ARTICLE 15. FIRE FIGHTING; FIRE COMPANIES AND DEPARTMENTS; CIVIL SERVICE FOR PAID FIRE DEPARTMENTS.
§8-15-8b. Authorized expenditures of revenues from the Municipal Pensions and Protection Fund and the Fire Protection Fund; deductions for unauthorized expenditures; record retention.
(a) Revenues allocated to volunteer and part volunteer
fire companies and departments may be expended only for the items listed in
subdivisions (1) through (15) of this section. Funds Money received
from the state for volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies and departments,
pursuant to §33-3-14d, §33-3-33, and
§33-12C-7 of this code, may not be
commingled with funds moneys received from any other source, except
money received as a grant from the Fire Service Equipment and Training Fund as
provided in §29-3-5f of this code. Expenditures may be made Distributions
from the Municipal Pensions and Protection Fund and the Fire Protection Fund
allocated to volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies and departments may be
expended only for the following:
(1) Personal protective equipment, including protective head gear, bunker coats, pants, boots, combination of bunker pants and boots, coats, and gloves;
(2) Equipment for compliance with the national fire protection standard or automotive fire apparatus, NFPA-1901;
(3) Compliance with insurance service office recommendations relating to fire departments;
(4) Rescue equipment, communications equipment, and ambulance equipment: Provided, That no moneys received from the Municipal Pensions and Protection Fund or the Fire Protection Fund may be used for equipment for personal vehicles owned or operated by volunteer fire company or department members;
(5) Capital improvements reasonably required for effective and efficient fire protection service and maintenance of the capital improvements;
(6) Retirement of debts;
(7) Payment of utility bills;
(8) Payment of the cost of immunizations, including any laboratory work incident to the immunizations, for firefighters against hepatitis-b and other blood-borne pathogens: Provided, That the vaccine shall be purchased through the state immunization program or from the lowest-cost vendor available: Provided, however, That volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies and departments shall seek to obtain no-cost administration of the vaccinations through local boards of health: Provided further, That in the event any volunteer or part-volunteer fire company or department is unable to obtain no-cost administration of the vaccinations through a local board of health, the company or department shall seek to obtain the lowest cost available for the administration of the vaccinations from a licensed health care provider;
(9) Any filing fee required to be paid to the Legislative Auditor’s Office under §12-4-14 of this code relating to sworn statements of annual expenditures submitted by volunteer or part- volunteer fire companies or departments that receive state funds or grants;
(10) Property/casualty insurance premiums for protection and indemnification against loss or damage or liability;
(11) Operating expenses reasonably required in the normal course of providing effective and efficient fire protection service, which include, but are not limited to, gasoline, bank fees, postage, and accounting costs;
(12) Dues paid to national, state, and county associations;
(13) Workers’ compensation premiums;
(14) Life insurance premiums to provide a benefit not to exceed $20,000 for firefighters; and
(15) Educational and training supplies and fire prevention promotional materials, not to exceed $500 per year.
(b) If any volunteer fire company or part-volunteer fire department spends any amount of money received from the Municipal Pensions and Protection Fund or the Fire Protection Fund for an item, service, or purpose not authorized by this section, that amount, when determined by an official audit, review, or investigation, shall be deducted from future distributions to the volunteer fire company or part-volunteer fire department.
(c) If any volunteer fire company or part-volunteer fire department purchases goods or services authorized by this section, but then returns the goods or cancels the services for a refund, then any money refunded shall be deposited back into the same, dedicated bank account used for the deposit of distributions from the Municipal Pensions and Protection Fund and the Fire Protection Fund.
(d) A volunteer fire company or part-volunteer fire department shall retain, for five calendar years, all invoices, receipts, and payment records for the goods and services paid with money received from the state for volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies and departments, pursuant to §33-3-14d, §33-3-33, and §33-12C-7 of this code and money received as a grant from the Fire Service Equipment and Training Fund as provided in §29-3-5f of this code.
CHAPTER 12. PUBLIC MONEYS AND SECURITIES.
ARTICLE 4. Accounts, Reports, and general provisions.
§12-4-14. Accountability
of persons grantees receiving state funds or grants; sworn
statements by volunteer fire departments; criminal penalties.
(a) For the purposes of this section:
(1) “Grantor” means a state spending unit awarding a state grant.
(2) “Person” “Grantee”
means any entity receiving a state grant, including a state spending unit,
local government, corporation, partnership, association, individual, or
other legal entity. The term “person” does not include a state spending unit
or a local government as defined in section one-a, article nine, chapter six of
this code
(3) “Report” means an engagement, such as an agreed-upon procedures engagement or other attestation engagement, performed and prepared by a certified public accountant to test whether state grants were spent as intended. The term “report” does not mean a full-scope audit or review of the person receiving state funds.
(4) “State grant” means
funding provided by a state spending unit, regardless of the original source of
the funds, to a person grantee upon application for a specific
purpose. The term “state grant” does not include: (A) Payments for goods and
services purchased by a state spending unit; (B) compensation to state
employees and public officials; (C) reimbursements to state employees and
public officials for travel or incidental expenses; (D) grants of student aid;
(E) government transfer payments; (F) direct benefits provided under state
insurance and welfare programs; (G) funds reimbursed to a person for
expenditures made for qualified purposes when receipts for the expenditures are
required prior to receiving the funds; (H) retirement benefits; and (I) federal
pass-through funds that are subject to the federal Single Audit Act Amendments
of 1996, 31 U.S.C. § 7501, et seq. The term “state grant” does not
include formula distributions to volunteer and part-volunteer fire departments and
fire companies made pursuant to §33-3-14d, §33-3-33, §33-12C-7 of said chapter of this code and
does not include money received from the Fire Service Equipment and Training
Fund as provided in §29-3-5f of this code.
(b) (1) Any person grantee
who receives one or more state grants in the amount of $50,000 or more in the
aggregate in a state’s fiscal year shall file with the grantor a report of the
disbursement of the state grant funds. When the grantor causes an audit, by an
independent certified public accountant, to be conducted of the grant funds,
the audit is performed using generally accepted government auditing standards,
and a copy of the audit is available for public inspection, no report is
required to be filed under this section. An audit performed that complies with
Office of Management and Budget circular A-133, as published on June 27,
2003, and submitted within the period provided in this section may be substituted
for the report.
(2) Any person grantee
who receives a state grant in an amount less than $50,000 or who is not
required to file a report because an audit has been conducted or substituted as
provided by subdivision (1) of this subsection shall file with the grantor a
sworn statement of expenditures made under the grant.
(3) Reports and sworn
statements of expenditures required by subdivisions
(1) and (2) of this subsection shall be filed within two years of the
end of the person’s grantee’s fiscal year in which the
disbursement of state grant funds by the grantor was made. The report shall be
made by an independent certified public accountant at the cost of the person
receiving the state grant grantee. State grant funds may be used to
pay for the report if the applicable grant provisions allow. The scope of the
report is limited to showing that the state grant funds were spent for the
purposes intended when the grant was made.
(c)(1) Any person grantee
failing to file a required report or sworn statement of expenditures within the
two-year period provided in subdivision
(3), subsection (b) of this section for
state grant funds disbursed after July 1, 2003, is barred from
subsequently receiving state grants until the person grantee has
filed the report or sworn statement of expenditures and is otherwise in
compliance with the provisions of this section.
(2) Any grantor of a state
grant shall report any persons grantee failing to file a required
report or sworn statement of expenditures within the required period provided
in subdivision (3), subsection (b) of this section
for a state grant disbursed after July 1, 2003, to the Legislative
Auditor for purposes of debarment from receiving state grants.
(d) (1) The state agency
administering the state grant shall notify the person grantee of
the reporting requirements set forth in this section.
(2) All grantors awarding
state grants shall, prior to awarding a state grant, take reasonable actions to
verify that the person grantee is not barred from receiving state
grants pursuant to this section. The verification process shall, at a minimum,
include:
(A) A requirement that the person
grantee seeking the state grant provide a sworn statement from an
authorized representative that the person grantee has filed all
reports and sworn statements of expenditures for state grants received as
required under this section; and
(B) Confirmation from the
Legislative Auditor by the grantor that the person grantee has
not been identified as one who has failed to file a report or sworn statement
of expenditures under this section. Confirmation may be accomplished by
accessing the computerized database provided in subsection
(e) of this section.
(3) If any report or sworn statement of expenditures submitted pursuant to the requirements of this section provides evidence of a reportable condition or violation, the grantor shall provide a copy of the report or sworn statement of expenditures to the Legislative Auditor within 30 days of receipt by the grantor.
(4) The grantor shall maintain copies of reports and sworn statements of expenditures required by this section and make the reports or sworn statements of expenditures available for public inspection, as well as for use in audits and performance reviews of the grantor.
(5) The Secretary of the
Department of Administration has authority to promulgate procedural and
interpretive rules and propose legislative rules for promulgation in accordance
with the provisions of §29A-3-1 et seq. of this code to assist in
implementing the provisions of subsections (a), (b), (c) and (d) of this section.
(e)(1) Any state agency
administering a state grant shall, in the manner designated by the Legislative
Auditor, notify the Legislative Auditor of the maximum amount of funds to be
disbursed, the identity of the person grantee authorized to
receive the funds, the person ‘s grantee’s fiscal year and
federal employer identification number, and the purpose and nature of the state
grant within 30 days of making the state grant or authorizing the disbursement
of the funds, whichever is later. If the state grant was awarded prior to
October 1, 2005, the grantor shall provide the information required by this
section by December 1, 2005.
(2) The State Treasurer
shall provide the Legislative Auditor the information concerning formula
distributions to volunteer and part-volunteer fire departments, made pursuant
to §33-3-14d,
§33-3-33,
and §33-12C-7
of said chapter of this code, the Legislative Auditor requests,
and in the manner designated by the Legislative Auditor.
(3) The Legislative Auditor
shall maintain a list identifying persons grantees who have
failed to file reports and sworn statements required by this section. The list
may be in the form of a computerized database that may be accessed by state
agencies over the Internet.
(f) An audit of state grant funds may be authorized at any time by the Joint Committee on Government and Finance to be conducted by the Legislative Auditor at no cost to the grantee.
(g) (1) Volunteer and
part-volunteer fire departments receiving formula distributions pursuant to §33-3-14D,
§33-3-33, §33-12C-7 of this code shall either:
(A) File a report, as
defined in §12-4-14(a)(3) of this code with the Legislative
Auditor within the same time frames as are required for sworn statements of
annual expenditures to be filed under this section. The report shall be made by
an independent certified public accountant at the cost of the volunteer or
part-volunteer fire department. The scope of the report is limited to showing
that the funds distributed were spent for authorized purposes; or
(B) File a sworn
statement of annual expenditures with the Legislative Auditor on or before
February 14 of each year. The sworn statement of expenditures shall be signed
by the chief or director of the volunteer fire department and shall be made
under oath and acknowledged before a notary public.
(2) If the sworn
statement or report required by this subsection is not filed on or before May
15, unless the time period is extended by the Legislative Auditor, the
Legislative Auditor may conduct an audit of the volunteer or part-volunteer
fire department.
(3) If the sworn
statement of annual expenditures or report required by this subsection is not
filed with the Legislative Auditor by July 1, unless the time period is
extended by the Legislative Auditor, the Legislative Auditor shall notify the
State Treasurer who shall withhold payment of any amount that would otherwise
be distributed to the fire department under the provisions of §33-3-14D, §33-3-33, §33-12C-7 of
this code until the report is complete. Moneys withheld pursuant to this
subdivision are to be deposited in the special revenue account created in the
State Treasury in §12-4-14(g)(4) of this code.
(4) The Legislative
Auditor may assign an employee or employees to perform audits or reviews at the
direction of the Legislative Auditor of the disbursement of state grant funds
to volunteer fire departments. The volunteer fire department shall cooperate
with the Legislative Auditor, the Legislative Auditor’s employees and the State
Auditor in performing their duties under this section. If the Legislative
Auditor determines a volunteer fire department is not cooperating, the
Legislative Auditor shall notify the State Treasurer who shall withhold payment
of any amount that would otherwise be distributed to the fire department under
the provisions of §33-3-14D, §33-3-33, §33-12C-7 of this code until the Legislative Auditor
informs the Treasurer that the fire department has cooperated as required by
this section. The State Treasurer shall pay the amount withheld into a special
revenue account hereby created in the State Treasury and designated the “Volunteer
Fire Department Audit Account”. If, after one year from payment of the amount
withheld into the special revenue account, the Legislative Auditor informs the
State Treasurer of continued noncooperation by the fire department, the State
Treasurer shall pay the amount withheld to the fund from which it was distributed
to be redistributed the following year pursuant to the applicable provisions of
those sections.
(5) Whenever the State
Auditor performs an audit of a volunteer fire department for any purpose the
Auditor shall also conduct an audit of other state funds received by the fire
department pursuant to §33-3-14D, §33-3-33, §33-12C-7 of this code. The Auditor shall send a copy
of the audit to the Legislative Auditor. The Legislative Auditor may accept an
audit performed by the Auditor in lieu of performing an audit under this
section.
(6) If the Legislative
Auditor is notified by a grantor that a fire department has failed to file a
report or a sworn statement of expenditures for a state grant it received, the
Legislative Auditor shall notify the Treasurer who shall withhold further
distributions to the fire department in the same manner provided in §12-4-14(g)(3) of this code.
(h) (g) Any report submitted pursuant to the provisions
of this section may be filed electronically in accordance with the provisions
of §39A-1-1
et seq. of this code.
(i) (h) Any person grantee who files
a fraudulent sworn statement of expenditures under subsection (b) or (g) of
this section subsection (b) of the section, a fraudulent sworn
statement under subsection (d) of this section, or a fraudulent report under
this section is guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined
not less than $1,000 nor more than $5,000 or imprisoned in a state correctional
facility for not less than one year nor more than five years, or both fined and
imprisoned.
§12-4-14b. Accountability of volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies or departments receiving state funds for equipment and training; review or audit of expenditures; withholding of state funds for delinquency or misuse; notifications.
(a) Definitions. — For the purposes of this section:
“Equipment and training grant” means a grant of money to a volunteer fire company or a part-volunteer fire department from the Fire Service Equipment and Training Fund created in §29‑3‑5f of this code;
“Formula distribution” means a distribution of money to volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies or departments made pursuant to §33-3-14d, §33-3-33, and §33-12C-7 of this code; and
“State funds account” means a bank account established by a volunteer fire company or a part-volunteer fire department and maintained for the exclusive use and accounting of money from formula distributions and equipment and training grants.
(b) Filing required documentation. — Every volunteer and part-volunteer fire company or department seeking to receive formula distributions or an equipment and training grant shall file copies of bank statements and check images from the company’s or department’s state funds account for the previous calendar year with the Legislative Auditor on or before February 1 of each year.
(c) Reviews and audits. — The Legislative Auditor is authorized to conduct regular reviews or audits of deposits and expenditures from formula distribution and equipment and training grant funds by volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies or departments. The Legislative Auditor may assign an employee or employees to perform audits or reviews at his or her direction. The State Treasurer shall provide the Legislative Auditor information, in the manner designated by the Legislative Auditor, concerning formula distributions and equipment and training grants paid to volunteer and part-volunteer fire departments. The volunteer fire company or part-volunteer fire department shall cooperate with the Legislative Auditor, the Legislative Auditor’s employees, and the State Auditor in performing their duties under the laws of this state.
(d) State Auditor. — Whenever the State Auditor performs an audit of a volunteer fire department for any purpose, the Auditor shall also conduct an audit of other state funds received by the fire department pursuant to §33-3-14d, §33-3-33, and §33-12C-7 of this code. The Auditor shall send a copy of the audit to the Legislative Auditor. The Legislative Auditor may accept an audit performed by the Auditor in lieu of performing an audit under this section.
(e) Withholding of funds. —The Treasurer is authorized to withhold payment of a formula distribution or an equipment and training grant from a volunteer or part-volunteer fire company or department, when properly notified by the Legislative Auditor pursuant to this section, of any of the following conditions:
(1) Failure to file, in a timely manner, copies of bank statements and check images with the Legislative Auditor;
(2) Failure to cooperate with a review or audit conducted by the Legislative Auditor;
(3) Misapplication of state funds; or
(4) Failure to file a report or a sworn statement of expenditures as required by §12-4-14 of this code for a state grant other than an equipment and training grant.
(f) Delinquency in filing. — If, after February 1, a volunteer or part-volunteer fire company or department has failed to file the required bank statements and check images with the Legislative Auditor, the Legislative Auditor shall notify the delinquent company or department at two separate times in writing of the delinquency and of possible forfeiture of its Fire Service Equipment and Training Fund distribution for the year. If the required bank statements and check images are not filed with the Legislative Auditor by March 31, unless the time period is extended by the Legislative Auditor, the Legislative Auditor shall then notify the Treasurer who shall withhold payment of any amount that would otherwise be distributed to the fire company or fire department. Prior to each subsequent quarterly disbursement of funds by the Treasurer, the Legislative Auditor shall notify each delinquent company or department twice per each quarter in which the company or department is delinquent. The Legislative Auditor may choose the method or methods of notification most likely to be received by the delinquent company or department.
(g) Noncooperation. — If, in the course of an audit or review by the Legislative Auditor, a volunteer or part-volunteer fire company or department fails to provide documentation of its accounts and expenditures in response to a request of the Legislative Auditor, the Legislative Auditor shall notify the State Treasurer who shall withhold payment of any amount that would otherwise be distributed to the fire department under the provisions of §33-3-14d, §33-3-33, and §33-12C-7 of this code until the Legislative Auditor informs the State Treasurer that the fire department has cooperated with the review or audit.
(h) Reporting of other grants. — Nothing in this section alters the duties and responsibilities of a volunteer or part-volunteer fire company or department imposed under §12-4-14 of this code if that company or department has received funds from any state grant program other than from the Fire Service Equipment and Training Fund. If the Legislative Auditor is notified by a grantor that a fire company or department has failed to file a report or a sworn statement of expenditures for a state grant it received, the Legislative Auditor shall notify the State Treasurer who shall withhold further distributions to the company or department in the manner provided in this section.
(i) Escrow and forfeiture of moneys withheld. — The Volunteer Fire Department Audit Account previously created in the Treasury is hereby continued. When the State Treasurer receives notice to withhold the distribution of money to a volunteer or part-volunteer fire company or department pursuant to this section, the Treasurer shall instead deposit the amounts withheld into the Volunteer Fire Department Audit Account. If the Treasurer receives notice that the volunteer or part-volunteer fire company or department has come into compliance in less than one year from the date of deposit into this special revenue account, then the Treasurer shall release and distribute the withheld amounts to the fire company or department, except that any interest that has accrued thereon shall be credited to the general revenue of the state. If, after one year from payment of the amount withheld into the special revenue account, the Legislative Auditor informs the State Treasurer of continued noncooperation by the fire department, the delinquent fire company or fire department forfeits the amounts withheld and the State Treasurer shall pay the amounts withheld into Fire Service Equipment and Training Fund created in §29‑3‑5f of this code.
(j) Misuse of state money. — If the Legislative Auditor determines that a volunteer or part-volunteer fire department or company has used formula distribution money for purposes not authorized by §8-15-8b of this code or has used equipment and training grant money for purposes not authorized by the grant program, the Legislative Auditor shall give a written notice of noncompliance to the department or company. If a volunteer or part-volunteer fire department or company disagrees or disputes the finding, the fire department or company may contest the finding by submitting a written objection to the Legislative Auditor within five working days of receipt of the Legislative Auditor’s finding. The fire department or company shall then have 60 days from the date of the Legislative Auditor’s finding to provide documentation to substantiate that the expenditures were made for authorized purposes. If the volunteer or part-volunteer fire department or company does not dispute the findings of the Legislative Auditor or if the volunteer or part-volunteer fire department or company is not able to substantiate an authorized purpose for the expenditure, the Legislative Auditor shall notify the Treasurer of the amount of misapplied money and the Treasurer shall deduct that amount from future distributions to that fire company or department until the full amount of unauthorized expenditure is offset.
CHAPTER 29. MISCELLANEOUS BOARDS AND OFFICERS.
ARTICLE 3. FIRE PREVENTION AND CONTROL ACT.
§29-3-5f. Fire Service Equipment and Training Fund; creation of fire service equipment and training grant.
(a) There is hereby created
in the Treasury a special revenue fund to be known as the Fire Service Equipment and Training Fund. Expenditures
from the fund by the State Fire Marshal are authorized from collections. The
fund may only be used for the purpose of providing grants to equip volunteer
and part-volunteer fire companies and departments and their members, and to
train volunteer and part-volunteer firefighters. Any balance remaining in the
fund at the end of any fiscal year does not revert to the General Revenue Fund,
but remains in the Special Revenue Fund. The State
Fire Marshal shall propose legislative rules for promulgation in accordance
with §29A-3-1 et seq. of this code to implement the grant program established
pursuant to this section
(b) The State Fire Marshal shall establish a grant program for equipment and training for volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies and departments. Such grant program shall be open to all volunteer and part-volunteer fire companies and departments. In making grants pursuant to this section, the State Fire Marshal shall consider:
(1) The number of emergency and nonemergency calls responded to by the department;
(2) The activities and responses of the department;
(3) The revenues received by the department from federal, state, county, municipal, local, and other sources; and
(4) The department’s assets, expenditures, and other liabilities, including whether the fire company or department has availed itself of available statewide contracts.
(c) The State Fire Commission
Marshal shall propose legislative rules for promulgation in accordance
with §29A-3-1 et seq. of this code to implement the grant program established
pursuant to this section.
(d) The Legislative Auditor shall notify the State Fire Marshal of any volunteer or part-volunteer fire company or department that is ineligible to receive grant funds due to the department’s failure to file required bank statements or financial reports or failure to comply with an audit or review by the Legislative Auditor. A fire company or fire department reported by the Legislative Auditor shall be ineligible to receive funds under this section until the Legislative Auditor notifies the State Fire Marshal that the company or department has come into compliance.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from a heading or the present law and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.