Owner’s project control review - Baker · PDF fileFrom concept and funding to controls...
Transcript of Owner’s project control review - Baker · PDF fileFrom concept and funding to controls...
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© 2014 Baker Tilly Virchow Krause, LLP
Owner’s project control review
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About Baker Tilly
> Established in 1931 > One of the top 20 largest accounting and advisory
firms in the United States according to Accounting Today’s 2014 list of “Top 100 Firms”
> More than 1,600 professionals > Baker Tilly Virchow Krause, LLP is the largest US
Baker Tilly International independent member firm > Baker Tilly International is the eighth largest public
accounting network with representation in more than 137 countries
> Convenient, seamless resource for worldwide needs
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From concept and funding to controls and compliance, Baker Tilly has more than 250 dedicated construction and real estate industry professionals to assist with your facility development project through all stages of the development lifecycle.
About Baker Tilly
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Overview
Audit activities Change orders Case studies
EXAMPLE TEX
Controls by project phase
Common construction program risks
Overview of construction program controls Today’s topics
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Learning objectives
> Understand construction program control fundamentals > Identify how the project risks change throughout the construction lifecycle > Recognize audit red flags and under performance indicators > Evaluate audit program elements
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Construction program controls
What are construction program controls? > Construction contracts > Documented, implemented policies, and procedures > Designed to mitigate project and program risks > Controls can help organizations:
– Improve project return on investment – Prevent realized losses from scope creep – Maintain project schedule, avoid preventable project delays – Improve communication of pertinent project issues – Monitor projects
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Construction program controls
> Contract controls include good definition of terms such as – allowable costs – right-to-audit – change orders – self-performed work
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Construction program controls
> Policies and procedures should include controls for all project phases: – Pre-construction – Construction – Post-construction
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Construction program controls
> Policies and procedures should be: – Documented in a comprehensive construction program controls manual – Detailed to reduce subjectivity in application and practice – Distributed to all construction personnel – Reviewed regularly for modifications
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Construction program controls
> Actual practices should be monitored and compared to documented controls > Monitoring helps ensure controls are:
– Implemented – Adhered to by personnel – Functioning as intended – Effective
> Controls that are not implemented, followed, or functioning properly are
not effective in mitigating risks
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Common construction project risks
> Overcharges > Unwarranted change orders > Scope creep > Construction quality issues > Unauthorized material
substitutions > Project schedule delays > Abuse of contingency funds > Unrealized credits and
available discounts > Claims and liens
> Project scope/requirements exceed funding
> Poorly defined contract terms and/or program controls
> Excessive billing rates > Undisclosed related party
transactions > Inaccurate or insufficient
project records > Inadequate staffing
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Types of construction program controls
> As the owner, you are ultimately responsible for everything > Detailed program controls to mitigate risks on construction projects are
crucial to successful capital programs > One way to organize program controls is by project phase
– Pre-construction – Construction – Post-construction
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Pre-construction controls
Major responsibilities Control examples Design • Design completion percentage before
construction begins • Design evaluation procedures
(feasible, functional) • Constructability review requirements • Value engineering procedures • Preliminary project schedule and
budget requirements
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Pre-construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Bid phase • Sole source procedures
• Bidder prequalification requirements • Standardized RFP templates • Bid posting, advertising, distribution • Bid analysis requirements
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Pre-construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Contract awards • Define basis of awards
• Required approvals, timing • Purchase order procedures
Contracting process • Applicable notices (award, NTP) • Standardized contracts • Approvals and approval thresholds
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Pre-construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Regulatory, economic development and business enterprise compliance
• Documentation of regulations applicable to the project
• Project business enterprise requirements (M/W/DBE)
• Compliance (Davis-Bacon, OSHA)
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Pre-construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Pre-construction work • Define cost estimate support
requirements • Determine basis for reimbursement/
contract types • Standardized contract terms and
conditions
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Construction controls
Major responsibilities Control examples Change order control • Change request process and
standardized forms • Cost/pricing analysis requirements • Allowed change order cost types • Cost and schedule change support
requirements
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Construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Schedule management • Narrative and approval requirements
for baseline/active schedules • Mandated schedule updates • Approval requirements for schedule
changes • Comparison of schedule to actual
completion • Schedule reporting details
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Construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Cost monitoring • PM review of budget/commitment to
actual • Variance communications • Invoice approvals • Project reporting
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Construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Safety • Project safety requirements
• Distribution of owner requirements • Contractor, subcontractor, vendor
acceptance • Compliance with OSHA, other
applicable regulations • Violations and corrective action plans • Accident and claim procedures
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Construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Contract accounting • Invoice approvals and approval
thresholds • Subcontract billing requirements • Expenditure processing (3-way
match) • Project financial reporting, frequency,
distribution
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Post-construction controls
Major responsibilities Control examples Physical project closeout • Substantial and final completion
conditions • Closeout submittal requirements • Delineate walkthroughs and
responsibilities • Punch list monitoring and resolution • Contract closeout procedures and
final reporting
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Post-construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Liquidated damages/shared savings calculations
• Application of contract provisions • Approvals of exceptions • Calculation methods • Timing of assessment/payments
Allowance and contingency reconciliation
• Responsible parties • Verification of usage compliance • Timing of reconciliation
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Post-construction controls (cont.)
Major responsibilities Control examples Accounting project closeout • Project capitalization procedures
• Contract reconciliations • Final cost audit • Accounting system project close
Warranty management • Warranty log requirements • Tracking/inspections • Claim procedures
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Case study #1: Change orders
Facts > University housing project > GMP contract totaling $100 million > Contractor self-performing carpentry work > SPW was agreed to using lump sum pricing > Contingency fund usage requires owner authorization
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Case study #1: Change orders (cont.)
Key tests > Analyze payment applications to identify line item overages > Compare general conditions percentage complete to overall project completion > Review project change order approvals and test for contract compliance > Examine RFI and change order control schedules to capture and highlight
duplicate submissions > Assess contingency logs and descriptions of usage
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Case study #1: Change orders (cont.)
Red flags > Contractor billing schedule of values reflects line item overruns
(negative balance to finish amounts) > Change request using contingency to add funds to general conditions > Duplicate scope of work in change order
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Case study #1: Change orders (cont.)
Findings > Contractor overran the SPW budget > Change order increased general conditions for duplicate trade/craft
scope of work to recover SPW overages > Owner’s senior project manager approved this change order Program controls in place were not functioning as intended.
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Case study #1: Change orders (cont.)
Control recommendations > Contract change order controls > Multiple review and approval requirements for change orders prior to
execution (VP, project executive, project manager, finance) > Discussion of pending changes (scope/amount) in weekly project meetings > Required communications informing program managers of line item
overruns (PM and accounting) > Change order increased general conditions for duplicate trade/craft
scope of work
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Case study #2: Billing
Facts > Hospital expansion project > GMP contract totaling $60 million > Contractor owned equipment is utilized on the project > Contract terms
– Include stipulated labor and equipment rates – Allow for annual labor escalation of 3 percent
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Case study #2: Billing (cont.)
Key tests > Review payment application supporting documents for adequacy
– Contractor owned equipment – daily project work logs or equipment usage tickets – Labor – timesheets
> Trace cost support to payment application > Analyze support provided to owner showing annual rate increase calculations > Determine existence of rental rate comparisons > Assess contractor owned equipment rates in comparison to average of local
rates
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Case study #2: Billing (cont.)
Red flags > Contract cost terms do not provide cost limitations or ceilings for
contractor owned equipment – Monthly rental rate restrictions – Charge limits for total rental charges
> Annual rate increase were not provided to the owner for review prior to billing with updated rates
> Incomplete or insufficient cost support provided with monthly billings > Lack of rental rate comparisons
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Case study #2: Billing (cont.)
Findings > Owner was billed for contractor owned equipment
– at 115 percent of the equipment fair market value – exceeding actual on-site usage
> Labor billings were based on rates exceeding the stipulated escalation percentage
> Project accounting controls did not include reconciliation of select cost support to amounts billed
> Owner personnel did not validate the increased labor rates for contract compliance
Contract controls were not favorable for the owner. Project controls were not adequate to help owner control costs.
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Case study #2: Billing (cont.)
Control recommendations > Contract terms should include restrictions on contractor equipment charges
– Require rate comparison to local rates – Stipulate contractor rate does not exceed average rate – Cumulative charges are not to exceed a stipulated FMV percentage
> Contract terms should stipulate billing cost support requirements > Contract controls should require documented owner approval of increased
rates prior to inclusion in billings > Program controls should mandate rate review/verification process
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Case study #2: Billing (cont.)
Control recommendations (cont.) > Project accounting controls should include reconciliation processes
– Accuracy of calculations – Adequacy of attached support to validate all charges – Contractual compliance of billing rates
> Documented processes for the handling of unsupported or questioned costs billed to the owner
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Case study #3: Collusion
Facts > City parking structure project > Fixed price contract totaling $22 million > Bids received ranged from $18.5 to $23 million > Undisclosed related parties between the owner and contractor > Related owner employee participates in bid award process and
decisions > Key bid details were shared between related parties such as how the
bids will be scored and desired pricing/owner maximum
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Case study #3: Collusion (cont.)
Key tests > Review RFPs to ensure standardized conditions are included, such as
disclosure of related parties > Examine project bid documents to verify:
– Pre-qualification was performed – Bid files including bids, bid tabs, scoring and award documents – Review exception detail assessing reason for deviation and approvals
> Compare bid practices to documented controls > Additional work to confirm observations could include interviews and
researching licenses and relationships
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Case study #3: Collusion (cont.)
Red flags > Winning bid was the last bid received and time stamped at midnight > Request for Proposal (RFP) did not require disclosure of related parties > Prequalification processes were not followed > Subjective scoring was used instead of award to lowest qualified bidder
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Case study #3: Collusion (cont.)
Findings > RFP did not include related party disclosure > Work was not awarded to the lowest qualified bidder in accordance
with policies and procedures > Award exception was not documented in the bid files > Prequalification policies were not adhered to Implemented program controls were effective.
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Case study #3: Collusion (cont.)
Control recommendations > RFPs should include standardized conditions such as disclosure of
related parties – Providing incorrect data disqualifies company from bid
> Policies and procedures should include additional controls such as – Disqualification of all parties not prequalified – Documentation requirements for all exceptions – Requirement of C-suite approval on all exceptions prior to award – Involvement of procurement or outside department in review prior to award
> Regular reviews to assess compliance with controls
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Case study #4: Shared savings
Facts > Office tower project > GMP contract totaling $85 million > Contract savings split: 80 percent to owner, 20 percent to contractor > Savings included any unspent allowance or contingency funds > Contract contingency was 8 percent of the cost of work (high)
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Case study #4: Shared savings (cont.)
Key tests > Analyze cost support provided to validate the original GMP amount > Review contract contingency percentage to assess reasonableness
– Typically averages 5 percent
> Examine cost support provided with change orders > Review contract allowance and contingency logs
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Case study #4: Shared savings (cont.)
Red flags > Lack of cost support for:
– GMP contract values – Change orders
> Excessive unused allowance and/or contingency funds
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Case study #4: Shared savings (cont.)
Findings > Original GMP costs were not supported with bids or estimates to
validate pricing was not inflated > Change orders were not supported with cost estimates, bids or actual
cost support > No independent cost estimates were performed > Contract work was completed for 90 percent of the GMP value > High contractor contingency percentage inflated contract value Contract controls were not favorable for the owner. Project controls were not adequate to help owner control costs.
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Case study #4: Shared savings (cont.)
Control recommendations > Contracts with split savings should require one of the following:
– Cost support (bids, estimates, historical support, etc.) – Performance of an independent cost estimate
> Contract terms should exclude unspent allowance and contingency funds from the savings calculation
> Program controls include: – Establishing contingency percentage guidelines (NTE ___ %) – Cost support reconciliations or third party estimates prior to contract
approvals – Verification of savings calculations
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Case study #5: Change orders
Facts > Hotel renovation project > Cost plus fee final contract totaled $44 million > Change orders were issued as lump sum changes
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Case study #5: Change orders (cont.)
Key tests > Detailed change order analysis
– Review change order cost type – Assess cost support to validate change amount – Total cumulative change order value to date – Calculate change order value percentage – Review change order approvals
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Case study #5: Change orders (cont.)
Red flags > Excessive change orders
– 10 percent or more of contract value – Large volume or number of changes
> Change orders lacking cost support to validate change amount > Charges that are not in compliance with the contract terms
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Case study #5: Change orders (cont.)
Findings > Change orders accounted for 27 percent of the final contract amount > Change orders were lump sum changes > Cost support was not adequate to validate the amount of the change > Independent cost estimates were not performed > Change order markup was not contractually compliant
Change order contract controls and program controls were not adequate help owner control costs.
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Case study #5: Change orders (cont.)
Control recommendations > Contract change order controls
– Support requirements – Stipulated change order markup percentages
> Program definition of excessive change order amounts > Guidelines for addressing excessive changes > Program controls requiring
– Validation of compliance with contract terms (rates, fee calculations, markups, etc.) – Lump sum change order qualifications (allowable circumstances for use)
Change order contract controls and program controls were not adequate help owner control costs.
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Disclosure
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Pursuant to the rules of professional conduct set forth in Circular 230, as promulgated by the United States Department of the Treasury, nothing contained in this communication was intended or written to be used by any taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed on the taxpayer by the Internal Revenue Service, and it cannot be used by any taxpayer for such purpose. No one, without our express prior written permission, may use or refer to any tax advice in this communication in promoting, marketing, or recommending a partnership or other entity, investment plan, or arrangement to any other party.
Baker Tilly refers to Baker Tilly Virchow Krause, LLP, an independently owned and managed member of Baker Tilly International. The information provided here is of a general nature and is not intended to address specific circumstances of any individual or entity. In specific circumstances, the services of a professional should be sought. © 2014 Baker Tilly Virchow Krause, LLP