Current with changes through the 2024 First Special Legislative Session
Section 84-305.01 - Audit report; working papers and audit files; access; request; failure to comply; late fee; refuse report; deficiency; powers and duties(1) The Auditor of Public Accounts shall have unrestricted access to the working papers and audit files for any audit report required to be filed with the office of the Auditor of Public Accounts.(2) Upon receipt of a written request by the Auditor of Public Accounts for access to working papers and audit files, the auditor or auditing firm responsible for preparing such audit report shall provide to the Auditor of Public Accounts as soon as is practicable and without delay, but not more than three business days after receipt of such request, either (a) access to all of the requested materials or (b) a written explanation, including the earliest practicable date for fulfilling the request and an opportunity for the Auditor of Public Accounts to modify or prioritize the items within the request, if the entire request cannot with reasonable, good faith efforts be fulfilled within three business days after actual receipt of the request due to the significant difficulty or extensiveness of fulfilling the request. No delay due to the significant difficulty or extensiveness of any request for access to working papers and audit files shall exceed three calendar weeks after receipt of the written request from the Auditor of Public Accounts. The three business days shall be computed by excluding the day the request is received, after which the designated period of time begins to run. Business day does not include a Saturday, a Sunday, or any of the days enumerated in section 25-2221 or declared by law or proclamation of the President of the United States or Governor to be holidays.(3) If the auditor or auditing firm responsible for preparing such audit report fails to comply timely and fully with a request for access to working papers and audit files, the Auditor of Public Accounts may:(a) Assess the auditor or auditing firm a late fee of twenty dollars per day for each calendar day the requested working papers and audit files remain inaccessible. Such late fee shall begin on the same day that the Auditor of Public Accounts notifies the auditor or auditing firm by facsimile transmission, email, or first-class mail of the failure to provide access. The total late fee assessed under this subdivision shall not exceed two thousand dollars per incident. Of the late fee assessed and collected pursuant to this subdivision, the Auditor of Public Accounts shall remit to the State Treasurer for credit to the Auditor of Public Accounts Cash Fund an amount sufficient to reimburse the direct costs of administering and enforcing this section, but such amount shall not exceed one hundred dollars from any such late fee assessed and collected. The Auditor of Public Accounts shall remit the remainder of any late fee assessed and collected under this subdivision to the State Treasurer to be distributed in accordance with Article VII, section 5, of the Constitution of Nebraska; and(b) Refuse to accept any audit report prepared by the auditor or auditing firm for a period of three calendar years from the date that the notification described in subdivision (3)(a) of this section is received by such auditor or auditing firm.(4) Any deficiency noted by the Auditor of Public Accounts in reviewing the working papers and audit files may be forwarded to the Nebraska State Board of Public Accountancy for its consideration. The Auditor of Public Accounts may make any information or documents required to investigate such deficiency available to the board.(5) For purposes of this section, working papers and audit files means those documents containing evidence to support the auditor's findings, opinions, conclusions, and judgments and includes the collection of evidence prepared or obtained by the auditor during the audit.(6)(a) If any written request made under subsection (2) of this section is sent by either registered or certified United States mail, a record authenticated by the United States Postal Service of delivery of such registered or certified mail shall be considered competent evidence that the request was delivered to the person or entity to whom addressed.(b) Any notification made under subdivision (3)(a) of this section which is transmitted through the United States mail shall be deemed made on the date it was mailed if the Auditor of Public Accounts provides competent evidence that such notification was deposited in the United States mail on such date.Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 84-305.01
Laws 2015, LB 539, § 11; Laws 2021, LB 369, § 1.Amended by Laws 2021, LB 369,§ 1, eff. 8/28/2021.Added by Laws 2015, LB 539,§ 11, eff. 5/28/2015.