After the Contracting Officer determines the Disclosure Statement to be adequate, the contract auditor will initiate a second review to determine whether the Disclosure Statement is compliant with both the CAS Board rules, regulations, and standards, and acqusition regulations. This second audit is supposed to be completed within 60 days of the contracting officer determination but rarely is.
With only 60 days to accomplish the compliance review, the audit coverage is often very high level. There is no way that auditors can perform in-depth reviews in this time span. The in-depth reviews of compliance with the 19 Cost Accounting Standards are performed on a cyclical basis over a three-year cycle. There are however, eight different noncompliances that can result from ths initial review:
- Disclosed practices not in compliance with CAS
- Disclosed practices not in compliance with FAR
- Actual practices of estimating costs not in compliance with CAS
- Actual practices of estimating costs not in compliance with FAR
- Actual practices of estimating costs not in compliance with Disclosure Statement
- Actual practices of accumulating or reporting costs not in compliance with CAS
- Actual practices of accumulating or reporting costs not in compliance with FAR
- Actual practices of accumulating or reporting costs not in compliance with Disclosure Statement
In practice, unless there is some glaring compliance matter, contractors (and prospective contractors) generally scoot by during the initial compliance review. Once contract performance begins however, the process of testing for compliance becomes continuous. The contract auditor will be looking for compliance in every audit performed.
We should point out that the Government makes a very big deal out of consistency in estimating and accumulating/reporting costs. The practices need to be the same. Also, the actual practices of estimating, accumulating, and reporting costs need to be consistent with what has been written - the disclosed practices. If the disclosed practices don't work, change the description. Its too easy for auditors to find cases where actual practices do not comply with disclosed practices.
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