Audit Finds Biden EPA Pushed Billions Through State Fund With Little Oversight
Office of Inspector General Report shows lax controls and permissive management practices allowed improper payment issues to grow rather than be corrected.
Recently, a fascinating audit report was released that highlights only a small sample of the waste, fraud, and abuse uncovered in the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) handling of the State Revolving Fund under the Biden administration. This puts additional perspective on the agency throwing “gold bars off the Titanic” in the waning days of the previous president.
The audit’s findings of improper and unknown payments illustrate how weak documentation, poor oversight, and misclassification of transactions can rapidly erode program integrity and public trust.
Topline: The Environmental Protection Agency “did not follow standard operating procedures” for reviewing its spending and underestimated its improper payments in 2022 and 2023, according to Jan. 29 audit from the EPA inspector general.
Key facts: Improper payments are those sent by the government for the wrong reason, the wrong amount or to the wrong person. Every year, federal programs review a sample of their payments to estimate how much was spent improperly.
In 2022 and 2023, the EPA reviewed 751 payments from its two state revolving funds, which help states pay for clean drinking water and wastewater infrastructure. They determined that only 31 of the payments were improper.
That was inaccurate, according to the latest audit.
The report finds that the EPA did not consistently identify, document, or report improper and “unknown” pay “ents in “its State Revolving Fund (SRF) annual reviews, resulting in significant underreporting of risk. The audit sampled 20 items and found significant issues with 19 of them.
The EPA did not appropriately identify unknown and improper payments or properly track them for reporting and resolution, which resulted in the Agency’s regions underreporting unknown and improper payments by approximately $54.4 million for fiscal year 2022 and $8.8 million for fiscal year 2023 for the transactions we reviewed. We reviewed 20 transactions selected from the 751 transactions the Agency sampled during its annual reviews and found errors in 19.
During the EPA’s review of state revolving fund transactions, regional staff accepted unapproved or unsigned construction invoices and summary data rather than individual invoices to support payments made from the State Revolving Fund Program. According to the Payment Integrity Information Act, if an agency
cannot determine whether a payment is proper or not because there is a lack of or insufficient information, the agency must treat that payment as improper.
A detailed review of the transactions showed that millions of dollars that were identified as proper were actually misclassified.
Even though the EPA correctly reported eight improper payments worth $226,326 for FY 2022, it did not properly report two improper payments worth $1.2 million that the Agency had identified as improper during its testing. All improper payments and resolution, whether discovered by the region, the state, or its auditors, must be reported in the PER and to EPA headquarters.
The Office of Inspector concluded that, without proper identification and tracking of improper and unknown payments, the EPA cannot reliably determine whether state loan programs are working as intended or whether SRF controls are operating effectively.
The report recommends that the Office of Water reevaluate its (laughably named) Payment Integrity Information Act risk assessment for the SRFs in light of the underreported amounts, revise and enforce transaction-testing guidance, and strengthen oversight to ensure that improper and unknown payments are tracked, resolved, and accurately reported to headquarters.
While the specific examples in this audit focus on a limited set of transactions, they point to broader systemic problems that were further expanded upon and deepened during the Biden administration, when lax controls and permissive management practices allowed these issues to grow rather than be corrected.
As an additional bonus, the competency of those implementing the program may have been impacted by Team Biden’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion hiring practices.
This audit should serve as a wake‑up call, not just about one program or one administration, but about a pattern of financial abuse that has flourished for decades under the banner of “environmenta” protection.” The State R” volving Fund findings are not outliers; they are a clear window into how billions in public money can be shuffled, misclassified, and effectively unaccounted for while agencies insist they are safeguarding the planet. When basic controls like signed invoices, clear documentation, and honest reporting are treated as optional, taxpayers are left funding a system that cannot even prove its own integrity.
For years, Americans have been told that ever‑expanding environmental spending is both urgent and unquestionable, even as oversight repeatedly exposes sloppy management, weak internal controls, and improper or “unknown” pay “ents th “t would never be tolerated in the private sector. This culture of casual stewardship—where missing paperwork and misreported millions are brushed off as technicalities—has allowed waste, fraud, and abuse to become baked into the machinery of environmental bureaucracies. Programs that should be tightly focused on clean water, real infrastructure, and measurable outcomes instead become vehicles for political agendas, patronage, and rushed grant‑making.
Sadly, all other programs designed to promote the well-being and protection of Americans likely face the same issues.
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Comments
“…gold bars off…
“…report improper and “unknown” payments(?) in…”
There are multiple similar typos throughout the article, likely caused by copying and pasting text between platforms or applications that don’t play well together.
“But, but, they were signed by President Autopen!”
Of course they did. How else do you expect the Democrat party to fund itself?
Someone better hurry and tell The New York Times, because they are not so inclined. Late last week, they ran with this headline:
“Trump Administration Erases the Government’s Power to Fight Climate Change”
Can we just STOP subsidies to any department or agency until the books are cleaned up? I know this will take years but we don’t know how much of the money was used for valid purposes.
A) It will cripple the ability of the *working* portions of the agency/department.
B) The fraudsters will promptly shed their skins and change names of their frauds, tucking the money away in rapid transfers to avoid audits, leaving investigators examining empty storefronts and abandoned accounts.
C) The dishonest portions of the agency with clean ‘faces’ will promptly find a collection of (fill in minority with disability here) to trot out for the media and cry on cue, otherwise known as the “puppy defense.’ (We see this on a local level any time budget cuts are proposed, and the school districts and police go into full howling mode, so the local bureaucrats shrug their shoulders and say “Well, I guess we need to raise taxes again.”)
D) What makes you think the *local* auditors are any less corrupt than the *local* people spending that money? Just like in Minnesota, the corruption goes all the way to the top.
Start requiring divisions/sections within the Federal agencies have their supervisor sign off to certify the payments were necessary/proper and anti fraud procedures followed. If a subsequent audit finds shenanigans then hold that supervisor accountable by firing them and fining them the full amounts of cumulative improper payments. Sell off their assets down to a set of clothes and put them to work digging ditches until they pay it off.
Correct in the general sense, but missing details. The Feds, from top to bottom, all worship the pension package. There may be several hundred thousand psychopaths that worship power more, but the pension is the main driver. To cure bade behavior of Feds, the pension system has to be the main motivator. Yes, fire them, but remove the pension of the fired person, his boss, and anybody with an audit function in the same silo.
A policy of strict and aggressive termination of pension for malfeasance or incompetence will change the Deep State in under two years. But there have to be a at least 100K examples made of bad actors.
Yep, the pension is one of the ‘assets’ that would be sold off to pay the fine imposed before they are sent to a prison work camp to dig ditches for the rest of their life to pay the remaining balance.
As a retired CPA, I have to say sign off thing only works with bosses who (1) wouldn’t cheat in any event or (2) bosses who would cheat but are too timid to do so given the “sign off” controls. Sadly, by now we should all realize Democrats fall into a third category: bosses who will cheat regardless of controls. Therefore, your “sign off” suggestion works just like the Sarbanes-Oxley law—it clears the field of honest people and amateur thieves, leaving it to professional crooks
You seem to be ignoring the very critical aspect of true accountability (pun intended).
Having signed off that the payments were ‘ok’ the individual assumes personal responsibility if any future determination is made that payments were ‘not ok’ and is held to account (pun intended).
That’s also the missing component of our current system where the bureaucracy operates seemingly secure in the belief that consequences and repercussions will not arrive for any deliberate misdeeds or malfeasance.
Looting the Republic is the game before a downfall
It’s the main game for the self congratulating grifters.
The revolutionaries are looting the Republic because it’s nice to be the commissar, but also to speed the downfall of the Republic. Just as critical theories expanded the dialectic, the growth of the administrative state expanded the Cloward-Piven strategy way beyond public assistance programs.
President Autopen’s puppetmasters were wholly corrupt. This is news?
Trace the money demand it back and then file felony charges for theft. If the bank or government sends me money by mistake they demand it back. If I spend it they file criminal charges. Recover it all. And then go department by department, agency by agency to find out how and where the money is disappearing too.
Akin to Biden’s corrupt EPA’s handing ~$2 billion to Stacey Abrams’ so-called, nascent, no track record “non-profit” organization, for its supposed efforts to install/gift “green” appliances to low-income homeowners in Georgia.
Just a transparently pure and brazen grift/theft, through and through. And, the number of similar scams exploiting the federal government’s profligate largesse, gifted with zero due diligence and oversight, are innumerable.
No oversight is a feature, not a bug.
You see with this out of the EPA why the Republicans now have 5x the campaign money on hand than the Dems. Once Trump got elected and cracked down on agencies like USAID the money laundering operation took a giant hit.
Everyone involved in ok’ing the payments should be terminated and investigated. I bet there is fraud like this throughout the government.
The tighter spigot on flows from Feds to various NGOs and greater internal oversight in the Executive Branch of where, what, who and why taxpayer funds of $5 Trillion plus another $2 Trillion borrowed from future generations (not counting decades of interest payments) actually go are definitely having an impact.
NAAAAWWWW…. it ain’t SO – Dems are for EVERYBODY being the exact same! My $ is your $, right?
For Democrats, enabling fraud is a FEATURE not a BUG.
Everything the D’s do, absolutely everything, is paid for almost entirely by taxpayer $$.
That’s why they were so freaked out over DOGE.