Webcast

Utilizing Government Contracts in Disaster Relief

Aired on Wed 10/19/2016 at 05:30PM GMT

Overview

When domestic disasters occur, the federal government can provide emergency relief and assistance to state and local governments to save lives, protect property, public health and safety, and even to avert damage in the event of future disasters. Such relief can take the form of direct aid from FEMA or other federal agencies, or disaster relief grants and subgrants to state and local governments, who can then award contracts to private entities in order to further the purpose of the grant. Federal disaster relief has obvious benefits for affected communities, but relief recipients are subject to audits and investigations for potential fraud, waste and abuse. Indeed, federal scrutiny of grant expenditures has intensified after Congress authorized billions of dollars in disaster relief to aid in the recovery from Hurricane Katrina and Super Storm Sandy.

In this course, attorney Raymond Monroe and Stephen Ramaley address the laws and regulations applicable to the expenditure of grant funding, paying particular attention to the use of grant-funded contracts as a means to accomplish grant objectives. This course draws on their experiences, as well as lessons learned from FEMA audit reports and court decisions, to outline best practices and strategies for achieving grant objectives within the confines of the numerous and shifting regulatory regimes.

Learning Objectives:

  1. Understand how federal funds flow to the States, and ultimately to contractors, for disaster relief
  2. Identify compliance controls regulations imposed on grant funds expenditures through the Stafford Act and its implementing regulations, as well as other select funding authorization mechanisms
  3. Recognize the compliance controls and regulations that apply (1) where grant funds result in direct contracting opportunities with the federal government and (2) where contracting opportunities arise with state and local governments who are spending federal grant funds, with an emphasis on (2), because there is a complex overlay of federal competition requirements, fraud and abuse controls, state rules (e.g., wage floors), and local municipal code considerations
  4. Appreciate the potential consequences for failing to comply with these controls and regulatory requirements, including False Claims/Statements liability, audit findings, funding revocation or non-reimbursement, or even criminal sanctions 

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