Local government agencies and quasi-public organizations (
local auditees 
) that receive $500,000 or more in revenues and other sources (local government agencies) or state and/or local assistance (quasi-public organizations) are required to provide an annual
audit report to the Louisiana Legislative Auditor (LLA). For more information about the types of reports local auditees are required to provide to LLA, see
What Kind of Report Does My Agency Need To Provide To the Legislative Auditor?
Audits 
result in a report, and include a document that is prepared by the CPA and referred to as the
auditor’s opinion 
, which states whether the auditor believes the financial statements are materially correct.
A clean or unmodified
opinion 
does not mean that the auditor is certifying that the financial statements are free of errors, or that no fraud occurred. In order to give this type of assurance, the auditor would need to test every transaction that occurred during the year. This would be costly to the agency, and make it difficult to issue the audit in a time frame so that the information would be relevant to users of the report.
In order to balance efficiency with effectiveness,
generally accepted auditing standards 
allow CPAs to test a representative sample of transactions during an audit. The sample that is chosen is based on the CPA’s judgment, and is normally based on factors such as the dollar amount of the transaction and the likelihood that the transaction may be misstated; whether due to error, or due to someone trying to cover up a fraud or misappropriation.
For instance, in an audit of a utility district that receives a lot of cash payments, the CPA may spend a large part of the time budget testing utility receipts. There are sound reasons for this methodology – utility receipts make up the majority of a utility district’s revenue; cash is portable and easily convertible for the needs of a utility clerk or other employee who is not entitled to it, and depending upon the controls the district has in place, it may be possible for an employee who takes cash utility receipts to conceal the theft through manipulation of the accounting records.
In order to adequately test utility receipts but still get the audit completed in a timely manner, the auditor of a utility district may decide to spend less time testing areas of a lower dollar amount or that he or she perceives to be less prone to risk of misstatement due to error or fraud. For example, the auditor may decide that travel expenses are not a significant area of risk, due to the relatively low dollar amount of the account balance and the controls the executive director says have been put in place. Consequently, travel expenses are not audited in the same manner as utility receipts are – maybe for years.
Then one year, the auditor notices that the travel expense account balance is unusually large. Upon further investigation, the auditor discovers that the district’s director is charging off his personal travel expenses through the district’s travel account. It has been going on for years, but because the amount of the account balance has always been low compared to the rest of the expense account balances, it was never detected. But this year, because the director got greedy or careless, the matter came to the attention of the auditor.
As unbelievable as it may seem to non-CPAs, the audits in which the director’s actions were not detected may have been adequately performed in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards – but that is little comfort to taxpayers who all too often see persons using public funds for private purposes.
LLA regularly receives complaints about what is called the expectation gap - the difference in what people think a CPA tests during an audit and what a CPA actually tests. In order to address these concerns, LLA considered other types of engagements in which the CPA could be required to take a more careful look at areas that might not end up in the representative sample tested in an audit engagement, and that may have caught, for example, what the hypothetical director of the utility district was doing.
One of these types of engagements is an agreed-upon procedures engagement. In an agreed-upon procedures engagement, the CPA performs procedures that are determined or agreed upon before the engagement begins. This type of engagement is not an audit, but can be structured to examine accounts that may not get much scrutiny during a normal audit.
LLA has promulgated an agreed-upon procedures engagement that must be performed for almost every local auditee that is required by
R.S. 24:513 to provide for annual audited financial statements, beginning with fiscal years on or after June 30, 2017. The agreed-upon procedures engagement addresses these areas:
Ø Written Policies and Procedures
Ø Board or Finance Committee
Ø Bank Reconciliations
Ø Collections
Ø Non-Payroll Disbursements
Ø Credit Cards/Debit Cards/Fuel Cards/P-Cards
Ø Travel and Travel-Related Expense Reimbursements
Ø Contracts
Ø Payroll and Personnel
Ø Ethics
Ø Debt Service
Ø Other
The CPA will perform the agreed-upon procedures engagement in conjunction with their audit engagement, and will issue a report with any exceptions noted. The report will be issued with the local auditee’s audit report.
The
list of agreed-upon procedures 
to be performed, a
sample engagement agreement 
, and answers to
frequently asked questions 
may be found on LLA’s website. Beginning in Year 3, the frequently asked questions document was combined with the list of agreed-upon procedures.
QUESTIONS:
Q. Many of the areas the agreed-upon procedures cover – such as bank reconciliations and payroll and personnel – look like areas that the CPA should be testing during their audit. Wouldn’t that be duplication of effort?
A. The agreed-upon procedures represent the
minimum work LLA requires a CPA to perform for a local auditee that is required to provide an audit report to LLA. Some of these areas – such as bank reconciliations and payroll – would be tested during most agencies’ audits. But there will be some local auditees whose operations do not require them to maintain a significant cash account; and there will be some local auditees who don’t have many employees, and whose payroll expense is are small in comparison to their other expenses. These less material account balances may not be tested during these agencies' audits. But since they are where problems have traditionally been found, LLA is requiring CPAs to test these areas through the agreed-upon procedures engagement during
every audit.
Q. Are nonprofits that report to LLA required to have the agreed-upon procedures performed?
A. Yes, if the nonprofit is required by
R.S. 24:513 to provide an annual audit report to LLA.
Q. My agency is required by
R.S. 24:513 to provide an annual compilation report to LLA. However, we voluntarily provide an audit. Are we required to have the agreed-upon procedures engagement performed?
A. No. The agreed-upon procedures are not required of those local auditees that are not required to provide an audit report to LLA by R.S. 24:513.
Q. What gives LLA the authority to require local auditees to provide for the agreed-upon procedures engagement in addition to their statutorily required audit?
A. R.S. 24:513 A. (6) gives LLA authority to prescribe the terms and conditions of engagements of local auditees.
Q. Aren’t the statewide agreed-upon procedures engagements going to be expensive for local auditees?
A. There will be a cost to local auditees, but LLA believes that the resulting improvement in local auditee operations, and enhanced transparency and accountability to the public, will exceed the cost of the engagements.