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Performance Audits
Kansas Department of Health and Environment: Evaluating Issues Related to the Bureau of Disease Control and Prevention (Limited Scope)
Lobbying Services: Evaluating a Small Sample of Local Governments’ Reported Payments to Lobbyists and Associations with Lobbyists
Enterprise Project Management Office: Evaluating the Statutory Definition and Monetary Threshold for Major IT Projects
Contracted Audits
Examining Selected Financial Management Practices of the Pooled Money Investment Board: Fiscal Year 2018
Statewide Financial Compliance Audit--Fiscal Year 2016 Part 1, Office of the Chief Financial Officer Comprehensive Annual Financial Report
IT Security Audits
State Agency Information Systems: Reviewing Significant Security Controls in Selected Agencies (CY 2017-2019)--Kansas Department on Children and Families
State Agency Information Systems: Reviewing Significant Security Controls in Selected Agencies (CY 2017-2019)--Kansas Department of Commerce
Agency Information Systems: Reviewing Significant Security Controls in Selected Agencies (CY 2017-2019)--Kansas Department of Health and Environment
Agency Information Systems: Reviewing Significant Security Controls in Selected Agencies (CY 2017-2019)--Kansas Highway Patrol
State Agency Information Systems: Reviewing Significant Security Controls in Selected Agencies (CY 2017-2019)--Department of Administration
State Agency Information Systems: Reviewing Significant Security Controls in Selected Agencies (CY 2017-2019)--Pittsburg State University
State Agency Information Systems: Reviewing Significant Security Controls in Selected Agencies (CY 2017-2019)--Kansas Bureau of Investigation
Reviewing the Provision of Statute Books to Legislators (100-hour audit)
View Abstract
Published: MARCH, 1995
The State spends about $45,000 annually to provide free law books to legislators, and an additional $100,000 providing free law books to others. If incumbent legislators were only provided with the books needed to update their sets of statutes, the State could have saved about $29,000 in printing costs during fiscal year 1994. The Legislative Coordinating Council has set the current price of statutes books at $405. At that price, the State generates enough money from the sale of statute books to cover the printing costs of books that are sold and distributed for free. The Secretary of State’s Office estimated that it discards about 2,000 law books valued at about $8,400. Closer monitoring of the number of books printed, sold, and discarded could save the State small amounts of printing costs each year.
Compliance and Control Audit: Legislature
View Abstract
Published: OCTOBER, 1990
No abstract available.