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Commissaries continue efficient reporting of taxpayer funds

Posted 4/28/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Kevin L. Robinson
DeCA Public Affairs


4/28/2011 - FORT LEE, Va. (AFNS) -- When it comes to accounting for taxpayer funds, the Defense Commissary Agency has proven that every dollar counts. For the ninth consecutive year, independent auditors have rated DeCA's financial statements as excellent.

In the accounting world, an excellent rating on the review of a corporate financial statement is called a "clean audit" or an "unqualified opinion." Since 2002, DeCA has been one of four Defense Department agencies to maintain a clean audit opinion. The others are the Military Retirement Fund, Defense Finance and Accounting Service and Defense Contract Audit Agency.

"As the topic of government spending dominates the headlines these days, this agency has been a leader for fiscal accountability for nearly a decade," said Joseph H. Jeu, the DeCA director and CEO. "This independent review gives our customers confidence that our financial statements are accurate as reported and accessible for review."

DeCA's financial statements reflect the agency's use of appropriated funds to deliver the commissary benefit. The agency generates nearly $6 billion in annual sales and receives nearly $1.3 billion in appropriated funding. During fiscal 2010, DeCA delivered $2.69 billion in savings to its customers, including more than $4 million in savings to its Guard and Reserve customers through on-site sales. Agency officials also invested nearly $300 million in surcharge funds toward replacement commissaries or renovations to existing stores and new equipment.

The path toward a clean audit begins and ends with DeCA employees who have dedicated themselves to be "good stewards of taxpayer dollars," said Larry Bands, DeCA's chief financial executive.

"This audit touches everyone in DeCA from store level to the highest senior executive," he said. "This level of review says that we account for, record and report the funds received and expended by the agency in support of the commissary benefit."

To prepare for the annual audit, agency accountants collect financial data during quarterly reporting periods. Auditors from KPMG, an international auditing firm, later review the agency's financial statements along with internal controls over financial processes. They check DeCA's reports for efficiency and accuracy in areas such as time and attendance, annual inventories of resale stocks, equipment inventories, property accountability, and information technology controls over financial systems.

The audit also examines DeCA's financial connection to organizations such as Defense Finance and Accounting Service-Columbus, Ohio. Results can range from "no opinion" to an "adverse opinion" to an "unqualified opinion," the highest possible ruling.

With the agency already into the third quarter of fiscal 2011, DeCA is well on its way toward achieving favorable audit results for the 10th straight year thanks to a corporate culture of accountability that permeates its operations from headquarters to the stores, said Cynthia L. Morgan, DeCA's director of accounting.

"This type of audit can be challenging, but very rewarding," she added. "It takes a team that is dedicated to getting the job done and that truly believes in the importance of financial integrity to make this happen year after year."



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