New York State Ofce of the State Comptroller
Thomas P. DiNapoli
Division of State Government Accountability
Report 2013-S-38  June   2014
Wage Thef Investgatons
Department of Labor
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   1
Executve Summary
Purpose 
To determine whether the Department of Labor (Department) is efciently utlizing its resources 
to  undertake  and  complete  wage  thef  investgatons  tmely  and  whether  these  eforts  are 
successful  in  recovering  funds  for  injured  workers.  Our  audit  covered  the  period  April  1,  2011 
through December 20, 2013. 
Background 
The Departments mission is to protect workers, assist the unemployed and connect job seekers 
to jobs.  Its Division of Labor Standards (Division) is commited to safeguarding New York State 
workers  through  vigorous  enforcement  of  State  Labor  Laws,  including  the  2011  Wage  Thef
Preventon  Act,  established  to  reinforce  protecton  of  workers  against  unfair  and/or  illegal 
employment and wage practces. By enforcing these laws, the Division seeks to promote future 
compliance by the employers under investgaton.
As  the  investgatve  and  resttuton  arm  of  worker  and  wage  protecton,  the  Division  conducts 
wage thef investgatons on behalf of workers who fle wage dispute claims against employers, 
and helps to collect unpaid wages, withheld wages, and illegal deductons. In 2013, the Division 
recouped nearly $23 million in wages and interest on behalf of more than 12,700 employees. 
Key Findings  
 The  Division  does  not  complete  wage  thef  investgatons  tmely.  As  of  August  26,  2013,  the 
Division had a caseload of 17,191 cases, including 9,331 actve investgatons and 7,860 cases 
pending  payment.    Of  these,  12,938  cases  (75  percent)  had  been  open  more  than  one  year 
since the inital claim was received. 
 The Divisions Workforce Protecton Management system does not provide management with 
accurate or useful case management reports. 
 Employers may be allowed a payment plan for resttuton, but the Division has not established 
criteria to guide eligibility or payment terms.
 The Division does not maintain a centralized record of all payment plans in efect, and neither 
the  Division  nor  its  districts  have  adequate  controls  in  place  to  track  and  monitor  employer 
compliance. 
Key Recommendatons  
 Develop efectve strategies to reduce the case backlog and complete new cases sooner. 
 Work  with  Informaton  Technology  Services  to  correct  the  current  case  management  reports 
and develop new reports to beter manage the current cases and backlog.
 Develop criteria for investgators to use to determine if a payment plan should be granted.
 Establish  specifc  payment  plan  procedures  and  update  the  policies  and  procedures  manual 
accordingly.
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   2
Other Related Audits/Reports of Interest
Department of Agriculture and Markets: Food Safety Monitoring (2013-S-27)
Department of Labor: Assessment and Collecton of Selected Fees and Penaltes (2010-S-70)
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   3
State of New York
Ofce of the State Comptroller
Division of State Government Accountability
June 6, 2014
Mr. Peter M. Rivera
Commissioner
Department of Labor
Building 12, State Ofce Campus
Albany, NY  12240
Dear Commissioner Rivera:
The  Ofce  of  the  State  Comptroller  is  commited  to  helping  State  agencies,  public  authorites 
and local government agencies manage government resources efciently and efectvely and, by 
so doing, providing accountability for tax dollars spent to support government operatons.  The 
Comptroller oversees the fscal afairs of State agencies, public authorites and local government 
agencies,  as  well  as  their  compliance  with  relevant  statutes  and  their  observance  of  good 
business practces. This fscal oversight is accomplished, in part, through our audits, which identfy 
opportunites for improving operatons. Audits can also identfy strategies for reducing costs and 
strengthening controls that are intended to safeguard assets. 
Following is a report of our audit enttled Wage Thef Investgatons. This audit was performed 
pursuant to the State Comptrollers authority under Artcle V, Secton 1 of the State Consttuton 
and Artcle II, Secton 8 of the State Finance Law.
This  audits  results  and  recommendatons  are  resources  for  you  to  use  in  efectvely  managing 
your operatons and in meetng the expectatons of taxpayers. If you have any questons about 
this report, please feel free to contact us. 
Respectully submited,
Ofce of the State Comptroller
Division of State Government Accountability
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   4
State Government Accountability Contact Informaton:
Audit Director:  John Buyce
Phone: (518) 474-3271 
Email: StateGovernmentAccountability@osc.state.ny.us
Address:
Ofce of the State Comptroller 
Division of State Government Accountability 
110 State Street, 11th Floor 
Albany, NY 12236
This report is also available on our website at: www.osc.state.ny.us 
Table of Contents
Background  5
Audit Findings and Recommendatons  6
Investgaton Case Management  6
System/Process Defciencies  7
Recommendatons  10
Audit Scope and Methodology  11
Authority  12
Reportng Requirements  12
Contributors to This Report  13
Agency Comments  14
State Comptrollers Comments  20
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   5
Background
The Department of Labors (Department) mission is to protect workers, assist the unemployed and 
connect job seekers to jobs.  Its Division of Labor Standards (Division) is commited to safeguarding 
New York State workers through vigorous enforcement of State Labor Laws, including the 2011 
Wage Thef Preventon Act, established to reinforce protecton of workers against unfair and/or 
illegal employment and wage practces. By enforcing these laws, the Division seeks to promote 
future compliance by the employers under investgaton.
As  the  investgatve  and  resttuton  arm  of  worker  and  wage  protecton,  the  Division  conducts 
wage thef investgatons on behalf of workers who fle wage dispute claims against employers, 
and helps to collect unpaid wages, withheld wages, and illegal deductons. It also enforces labor 
laws that forbid employers from taking illegal kickbacks from wages or appropriatng employee 
tp earnings. In 2013, the Division recouped nearly $23 million in wages and interest on behalf of 
more than 12,700 employees. 
Within  the  Division,  there  are  13  districts  that  are  charged  with  regional  non-monetary  and 
monetary  investgatons  of  potental  employment  violatons  concerning  minimum  wage, 
payment of wages and wage supplements, child labor, hours of work, farm labor, apparel industry 
registraton,  and  industrial  homework  (i.e.,  work  in  a  residental  establishment).  When  their 
investgatons are completed, district investgators then oversee employer resttuton.
Wage thef investgatons are, by nature, generally complex and thus labor- and tme-intensive. 
Components  of  a  thorough  investgaton  include  historical  examinaton  of  employee  records, 
employer  fles  and  data  systems,  as  well  as  interviews  with  the  employer  and  claimant(s). 
Investgatons  increase  in  complexity  and  length  when  obstructons  to  fact-fnding  (e.g., 
inaccurate,  incomplete,  or  missing  records;  employees  whose  whereabouts  become  unknown; 
non-compliant employers) arise, as ofen occurs. The likelihood of such complicatons increases 
as investgatons age.
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   6
Audit Findings and Recommendatons
From 2008 to 2013, the Divisions cumulatve wage thef investgaton caseload has been on the 
rise,  with  yearly  increases  ranging  from  21  percent  to  35  percent,  including  a  slight  reversal  in 
2013. We determined that the Division has not been able to keep pace with the rising demands, 
resultng in a growing backlog of aging cases awaitng completon and a corresponding increase in 
lag tme untl cases are setled and claimants receive payment. The backlog buildup is occurring 
largely  because  district  ofces  have  many  cases  to  investgate  and  a  limited  number  of  staf  to 
perform  the  work.    However,  we  also  found  inefciencies  in  Division  procedures  and  its  use  of 
resources that, if corrected, could improve productvity. 
Wage  thef  investgatons  are,  by  nature,  generally  complex  and  tme-intensive.  Although 
the  Division  does  not  impose  tme  limitatons  on  the  length  of  investgatons,  it  is  imperatve 
the  Division  strive  for  efcient  case  completon  in  order  to  minimize  claimants  wait  tme  for 
compensaton.  As  investgatons  lag,  there  is  also  a  greater  risk  that  complicatons  will  arise 
that  will  interfere  with  fact-fnding  and  case  setlement  (e.g.,  records  become  lost,  employees 
cannot be found due to job change or relocaton), further impeding progress and increasing the 
possibility that employees may not receive the full compensaton to which they are enttled. For 
the 2013-14 fscal year, Division ofcials established a goal to complete an average investgaton 
within six months.
Investgaton Case Management
The Departments cumulatve wage thef investgaton caseload has been increasing steadily from 
2008 through 2012, with new open cases outnumbering cases closed by an average of 27 percent 
each year.  There was a slight reversal in this trend in 2013, as detailed in the following table. 
 
Year  Cases    
Opened 
Cases Closed  Caseload Change 
2008  8,414  5,500  +2,914 
2009  7,588  5,758  +1,830 
2010  7,510  5,491  +2,019 
2011  7,336  5,767  +1,569 
2012  6,996  4,999  +1,997 
2013  6,533  6,794  -261 
Total  44,377  34,309  +10,068 
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   7
Our  audit  revealed  that,  as  of  August  26,  2013,  the  Division  had  a  total  of  17,191  cases,  an 
increase of about 150 percent from the approximately 7,000 cases on hand at the start of 2008. 
The current caseload consists of 9,331 actve investgatons and 7,860 cases pending payment.  Of 
these, 12,938 (75 percent) were at least one year old from inital claim date.  
As  the  backlog  has  increased,  so  too  has  the  caseload  per  investgator.  As  of  August  2013,  we 
estmate that the Divisions staf of 98 investgators was responsible for an average of 95 actve 
investgatons  each.  The  Division  has  not  analyzed  its  investgaton  process  to  determine  the 
optmum  caseload  of  actve  investgatons  per  investgator,  and  we  acknowledge  the  challenge 
this increased workload presents for the Division. However, by making tme-saving adjustments 
elsewhere  (as  discussed  later  in  this  report),  more  tme  could  be  allocated  to  conductng 
investgatons, thereby bringing the Division closer to its goals of tmely completon of cases. 
One  factor  driving  the  growing  investgaton  backlog  is  the  Divisions  required  investgatve 
scope period. Prior to May 2013, the Division mandated that all cases cover a standard six-year 
investgatve  scope  period.  Such  depth  of  examinaton  adds  considerably  to  the  length  of  the 
investgaton. In an atempt to stem the rising backlog and to conduct investgatons more tmely, 
in  May  2013  the  Division  reduced  this  investgatve  scope  period  from  six  years  to  three  years. 
The Division also no longer investgates certain types of wage claims, including cases where more 
than three years have lapsed since employment ceased or date of violaton occurred; complaints 
received  from  a  private  atorney  representng  a  claimant;  and  cases  involving  non-monetary 
issues, which are now handled via leter to the employer and claimant.
During  our  audit  the  Division  also  insttuted  other  procedural  changes  to  streamline  its  work 
and reduce the backlog. For instance, the Division is now identfying additonal cases that can be 
resolved through compliance conferences, and closing cases that are unlikely to reach setlement 
(e.g., cases where the employer has no known assets in the State) or that involve uncollectable 
claims less than $500. 
Finally,  during  the  later  stages  of  our  audit  (November  -  December  2013)  the  Division  decided 
to no longer accept and investgate claims from commission salespersons and to establish a new 
policy for handling minimum wage complaints by former employees.  These investgatons are now 
conducted primarily by mail or telephone, and the employers are given just 21 days to respond 
to  the  Divisions  request  for  records.    Furthermore,  to  achieve  a  more  balanced  distributon  of 
workload, the Division now plans to have staf from its upstate districts conduct these mail/phone 
investgatons for the New York City area, where the majority of these claims are fled.  Prior to 
this  policy  change,  cases  generally  remained  in  their  originatng  districts.    At  the  tme  of  our 
audit, it was too soon to determine the extent that these eforts would be successful in reducing 
caseloads and backlogs. 
System/Process Defciencies
We  found  that  certain  Division  resources  and  processes  for  investgatng  wage  thef  claims  are 
not  appropriately  structured  for  optmum  efciency  and  efectveness  to  assist  the  Division  in 
overcoming  its  caseload  challenges.    In  fact,  some  actually  serve  as  impediments  to  orderly, 
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   8
tmely investgaton, including shortcomings in the Divisions case management computer system 
and a lack of controls over payment collecton and tracking.
Worker Protecton Management System Reports
For  optmum  efciency  and  efectveness  in  managing  investgatons,  the  Divisions  data 
management  system  must  be  able  to  make  efectve  and  accurate  use  of  all  data  to  produce  a 
range  of  criteria-specifc,  routne  (e.g.,  quarterly)  summary  reports.  The  Divisions  informaton 
resource for case management, including payment collecton, tracking, and disbursement, is the 
Worker Protecton Management (WPM) system. 
We found that this system, developed by a consultant in the late 2000s at a cost of about $812,000, 
lacks  the  necessary  functonality  and  fexibility  to  meet  the  Divisions  reportng  needs.  WPM  is 
capable of producing only a few case management summary reports and can only present data 
for the Division as a whole. Standard reports cannot be generated for subsets of data based on 
individual district actvites or on other variables that may be critcal to meaningful data analysis. 
According to Division ofcials, management reportng capability was an intended deliverable of 
the WPM system; however, due to complicatons and contract disputes with the developer, this 
functonality was never fully developed. In the absence of this deliverable, Division staf have had 
to develop work-around measures to create the range of reports it needs for case management. 
These  measures  range  from  requestng  that  specialized  reports  be  created  on  an  as-needed 
basis by the States Informatonal Technology Services (ITS) ofce, to having each district or user 
manually create their own reports from data drawn from the WPM system and then parsed by 
specifc criteria (e.g., case age, investgaton type, investgator). 
The WPM is further fawed in that the few case management reports that it does produce are not 
reliably accurate. To assess WPM reliability and accuracy, we had ITS produce a report of all cases 
as of August 26, 2013 and compared the results with those from WPMs August 2013 summary 
report. The WPM report identfed14,155 cases, an incorrect number that Department ofcials 
relied upon as the basis of testmony in a fall 2013 New York State Assembly hearing. In contrast, 
the ITS report showed the actual number of cases was 17,191.  Further, Division ofcials told us 
they routnely have to request reports directly from ITS in order to obtain accurate informaton.
Without easy, immediate access to accurate case informaton suited to data analysis, investgators 
and  supervisors  will  contnue  to  unnecessarily  spend  energy  and  tme  on  case  management 
instead  of  investgatng  cases,  completng  them  more  tmely,  and  reducing  the  backlog.    Even 
though a 2009 Department internal audit pointed to some of these problems in the WPM system 
as contributors to inefciency in the investgatve process, they have yet to be corrected. Division 
ofcials stated that, due to other priorites, ITS has not taken acton to remedy the problems. We 
recommend that the Division work with ITS to correct the defciencies in the WPM system, both 
to improve case management and to achieve greater efciency. 
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   9
Payment Procedures 
Employers  who  are  unable  to  pay  the  total  amount  owed  to  employees  may  be  eligible  for  a 
payment plan arrangement. However, the Divisions policies and procedures manual, last updated 
in July 2013, has no policy regarding payment plans, nor any established criteria for determining 
eligibility or payment plan terms. Without a frm policy in place, there is an increased risk that 
payment plans may be put in place that have a greater risk of default.  
In response to our inquiries, Division staf provided us with draf procedures that they indicated 
were being  considered  for  a  future version  of  the  manual.  According  to  the  draf, investgators 
could  ofer employers  up  to  a  three-month  payment  plan.    Plans  could  also  be  extended  to  six 
months  with  approval  from  the  Senior  Labor  Standards  Investgator.    For  large  underpayment 
sums, supervisors could approve agreements of up to one year, but any further extensions would 
be handled on a case-by-case basis and only for very large sums.  In all cases, investgators should 
atempt  to  make  the  installments  as  large  as  possible  and  cover  the  shortest  period  of  tme. 
With any installment payment agreement, an inital payment of one-third or one-half should be 
obtained and the remaining balance paid in installments.  The substantal inital payment would 
be obtained to ensure receipt of a majority of the funds in the event of later default. 
Subsequent  to  our  audit,  on  January  10,  2014,  the  Division  formalized  its  payment  plan  policy 
and provided us with a copy. This policy does not contain any of the payment plan terms outlined 
in the draf version.  Rather, the policy only states that payment plans are generally discouraged 
but,  if  requested,  investgators  must  discuss  the  request  with  their  supervisor  or  direct  the 
employer  to  their  supervisor  to  make  arrangements.    We  do  not  believe  this  policy  provides 
sufcient guidance for investgators or supervisors, nor does it address important factors such as 
the employers need or eligibility for a payment plan, down payment requirements, or payment 
plan terms or structure.
Given the Divisions lack of payment plan guidelines, we sought to determine what criteria and 
processes  districts  were  actually  using  to  implement  and  track  payment  plans.  The  Division, 
however, was unable to provide us with relevant payment plan data, including the total number 
of payment plans in efect, total amounts owed, monthly payment amounts and due dates, and 
remaining  balances  due.  Instead,  ofcials  told  us  that  each  district  ofce  administers  its  own 
payment  plans  and  is  responsible  for  receiving  payments,  updatng  the  payment  plan  records 
and following up on delinquent payments, and should thus likewise keep summary payment plan 
records. However, the Division is ultmately responsible for payment plan management and should 
be able to provide this informaton. Such data is integral to the Divisions efectve oversight and 
accountability of its regional operatons. 
The  largest  number  of  payment  plans  is  maintained  by  the  Monetary  Services  District,  which 
is  responsible  for  collectng  on  Orders  to  Comply  and  judgment  cases.  To  obtain  data  on  a 
sample  of  payment  plans,  we  requested  records  from  the  Monetary  Services  staf.  However, 
they  could  not  provide  us  with  a  listng  of  all  payment  plans  currently  in  efect.  According  to 
Monetary Services staf, payment plan data is maintained in WPM but the system does not have 
the capability to produce a report, so such records must be compiled manually. Because staf do 
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   10
not require this informaton in the course of normal business, nor does Monetary Services believe 
they need to know the number and value of their payment plans, these records are not produced. 
As a result, to obtain an estmate of the number of Monetary Services plans in efect, a Division 
employee had to manually review all the payment plans recorded in the WPM database by date of 
deposit, and then apply several additonal steps and further criteria to parse out the informaton 
our  auditors  needed.  This  complicated,  tme-intensive  process  resulted  in  only  an  estmate  of 
157 actve payment plan cases totaling $13.8 million in original claim amounts.  The data did not 
identfy the number of employees receiving payments as a result of these plans.
In general, all district ofces have their own way of devising payment plans and of recording and 
tracking  payment  transactons.    We  sampled  47  payment  plans  at  six  district  ofces  and  found 
that  generally  the  district  ofces  were  following  the  criteria  identfed  in  the  draf  procedures, 
except in terms of the amount of acceptable down payment. Only 12 of the 47 plans we tested 
(26 percent) included a down payment of one-third or more as stpulated in the draf procedures. 
We also found that two of the 10 payment plans we sampled from Monetary Services were not 
actually  payment  plans,  but  rather  cases  where  businesses  had  failed  to  remit  their  payments 
and for which there will be a judgment referral. This situaton further demonstrates the need for 
a centralized record-keeping system. 
In 2009 the Departments Internal Audit Unit issued a report on the Divisions Minimum/Prevailing 
Wage Audit eforts that identfed similar problems and inconsistencies with payment plan details 
and  criteria.  The  report  recommended  the  Division  move  to  a  centralized  system  for  collectng 
and recording payment plan transactons to increase efciency and strengthen controls over cash 
receipts. Despite the evidence presented in the audit, Division ofcials disagreed and supported 
the current system of district-level control as the more efcient process, preferring to assign the 
investgator who already has intmate knowledge of the case responsibility for all payment-related 
actvites, including collecton, recording of transactons, payment authorizaton, and distributon. 
However, these dutes are incompatble in an efectve system of internal control over payment 
transactons.  Managements failure to separate these key functons, combined with its inability 
to  monitor  and  assess  day-to-day  payment  plan  operatons,  substantally  increases  the  risk  of 
errors or irregularites that may occur and remain undetected. 
We  concluded  that  the  Departments  performance  in  this  area  falls  considerably  short  of  the 
minimum requirements established by the Comptrollers Standards for Internal Control in New 
York  State  Government.  As  a  result,  we  concur  with  the  internal  audit  recommendatons  and 
believe a more centralized system of payment plan management would not only improve internal 
control  and  reduce  the  risk  of  irregularites,  but  also  increase  efciency  by  freeing  up  staf  to 
focus on the actual work of investgatons, thereby completng cases more tmely and reducing 
the backlog.  
Recommendatons
1.  Contnue  eforts  to  close  the  oldest  wage  investgaton  cases  and  strive  to  investgate  and 
resolve newer cases more tmely.
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   11
2.  Monitor  the  newly  implemented  strategies  discussed  in  this  report  and  contnue  to  pursue 
additonal initatves to reduce the wage investgaton case backlog and complete new wage 
investgaton cases sooner. 
3.  Work  with  ITS  to  correct  WPM  system  faws  and  develop  its  capability  to  create  meaningful 
reports to beter manage the current cases and backlog. 
4.  Establish specifc payment plan procedures and include them in the policies and procedures 
manual. 
5.  Develop criteria for investgators to use to determine if a payment plan should be granted.
6.  Ensure that each district ofce follows the payment plan procedures and keeps similar records.
7.  Develop  a  centralized  payment  collecton  system  to  efectvely  separate  incompatble  dutes 
and to manage all payment plan informaton and transactons.
Audit Scope and Methodology
We audited whether the Department is efciently utlizing its resources to undertake and complete 
wage thef investgatons and whether these eforts are successful in recovering funds for injured 
workers. Our audit covered the period April 1, 2011 through December 20, 2013.
To  accomplish  our  audit  objectves,  and  determine  whether  associated  internal  controls  are 
adequate,  we  interviewed  Department  and  Division  ofcials  and  atended  Legislatve  hearings 
relevant to implementaton of the Wage Thef Protecton Act.  We also reviewed other relevant 
laws, the Divisions policies and procedures manual, and the Departments internal audit report 
of  Minimum/Prevailing  Wage  Audit  eforts  issued  in  2009.  We  requested  and  analyzed  the 
Divisions caseload statstcs as of August 26, 2013, and analyzed the capabilites of the Workforce 
Protecton Management computer system. 
We also made site visits to fve Division district ofces in Albany, Manhatan, Brooklyn, Queens, 
and Syracuse. We selected these districts based on the number of cases each had and on their 
geographical coverage. We interviewed supervisors and investgators at each ofce. We reviewed 
a judgmental sample of 49 cases that were over two years old, as well as 47 payment plans (39 
drawn from the fve district ofces and eight from Monetary Services).
We conducted our performance audit in accordance with generally accepted government auditng 
standards.  Those  standards  require  that  we  plan  and  perform  the  audit  to  obtain  sufcient, 
appropriate  evidence  to  provide  a  reasonable  basis  for  our  fndings  and  conclusions  based  on 
our audit objectves. We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
fndings and conclusions based on our audit objectves. 
In additon to being the State Auditor, the Comptroller performs certain other consttutonally and 
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   12
statutorily mandated dutes as the chief fscal ofcer of New York State. These include operatng 
the  States  accountng  system;  preparing  the  States  fnancial  statements;  and  approving  State 
contracts,  refunds,  and  other  payments.  In  additon,  the  Comptroller  appoints  members  to 
certain boards, commissions and public authorites, some of whom have minority votng rights. 
These dutes may be considered management functons for purposes of evaluatng organizatonal 
independence  under  generally  accepted  government  auditng  standards.  In  our  opinion,  these 
functons do not afect our ability to conduct independent audits of program performance.
Authority
The audit was performed pursuant to the State Comptrollers authority as set forth in Artcle V, 
Secton 1 of the State Consttuton and Artcle II, Secton 8 of the State Finance Law.
Reportng Requirements
We  provided  a  draf  copy  of  this  report  to  Department  ofcials  for  their  review  and  formal 
comment.  We have considered the Departments comments in preparing this report and have 
included  them in  their entrety at the end of  it.   Department ofcials  substantally  agreed with 
most of our recommendatons and indicated that certain actons will be taken to address them. 
Ofcials indicated they will not be implementng the recommendaton regarding the centralizaton 
of  payment  collectons.    Also,  our  comments  addressing  certain  Department  statements  are 
included on the reports State Comptrollers Comments.
Within  90  days  afer  fnal  release  of  this  report,  as  required  by  Secton  170  of  the  Executve 
Law,  the  Commissioner  of  the  Department  of  Labor  shall  report  to  the  Governor,  the  State 
Comptroller, and the leaders of the Legislature and fscal commitees, advising what steps were 
taken to implement the recommendatons contained herein, and where recommendatons were 
not implemented, the reasons why.
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   13
Division of State Government Accountability
Andrew A. SanFilippo, Executve Deputy Comptroller
518-474-4593, asanflippo@osc.state.ny.us
Tina Kim, Deputy Comptroller
518-473-3596, tkim@osc.state.ny.us
Brian Mason, Assistant Comptroller
518-473-0334, bmason@osc.state.ny.us
Vision
A team of accountability experts respected for providing informaton that decision makers value.
Mission
To improve government operatons by conductng independent audits, reviews and evaluatons 
of New York State and New York City taxpayer fnanced programs.
      Contributors to This Report
John Buyce, CPA, CIA, CGFM, Audit Director
Brian Reilly, CFE, CGFM, Audit Manager
Bob Mainello, CPA, Audit Supervisor
Michael Cantwell, Examiner-in-Charge
Richard Canfeld, MS, Staf Examiner 
Thierry Demoly, Staf Examiner
Christ Martn, Staf Examiner
Daniel Rossi, Staf Examiner
Marzie McCoy, Senior Editor
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   14
Agency Comments
*
Comment
1
*
Comment
2
* See State Comptrollers Comments, page 20.
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   15
*
Comment
3
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   16
*
Comment
1
*
Comment
2
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   17
*
Comment
4
*
Comment
5
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   18
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   19
*
Comment
6
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   20
State Comptrollers Comments
1.  Department  ofcials  are  correct  that  in  2013,  for  the  frst  tme  in  more  than  fve  years, 
the Division closed slightly more cases than it opened.  This is illustrated in the table on 
page  6  of  our  report.  However,  the  fact  remains  that  the  Departments  caseload  is  stll 
almost two and a half tmes the level it was in 2008 and, as a general trend, backlogs have 
contnued to increase even though the number of new cases opened each year has been 
declining.  Even afer discountng for the number of cases that are only awaitng payment 
(7,860), the Departments inventory of actve cases where the investgaton phase is stll 
incomplete (9,331) was more than 40 percent higher than the total number of new cases 
opened during all of 2013 (6,533).
2.  The Departments characterizaton of our audit methodology is inaccurate and misleading. 
As  detailed  in  the  Audit  Scope  and  Methodology  secton  of  our  report,  our  conclusions 
about  caseloads,  backlogs  and  overall  delays  in  fnalizing  cases  are  based  primarily  on 
our  review  of  the  Divisions  policies  and  procedures,  our  analysis  of  data  on  all  of  the 
Departments  caseload  actvites,  and  an  evaluaton  of  the  accuracy  and  capabilites 
of  its  caseload  management  system.    Our  visits  to  district  ofces,  and  the  selecton  of 
the  associated  cases  reviewed  in  detail  with  regional  staf,  serve  to  verify  procedural 
compliance  and  consistency  among  the  districts  and  to  identfy  possible  causes  for 
extraordinary  delays,  such  as  cases  that  were  actve  for  more  than  two  years.  In  fact, 
many of these cases go back as far as 2008, a clear indicaton that investgatons are not 
completed tmely, thereby contributng to the increasing backlog.
3.  The Departments response also mischaracterizes the scope and objectves of our audit, 
which was directed at its eforts to recover funds for workers, not just the Divisions role 
in undertaking and completng individual investgatons.  In the end, the measure of the 
success of  the program must be the extent to  which injured workers receive the wages 
they  are  due,  not  simply  whether  one  Division  involved  in  the  process  performed  its 
assigned tasks.
4.  Throughout  the  course  of  the  audit  the  Department  has  represented  its  wage  thef
caseload as more than 14,000, including during testmony in a fall 2013 New York State 
Assembly  hearing.  In  contrast,  in  an  efort  to  provide  a  more  balanced  view  of  case 
progress, our report makes a point of distnguishing the diference between actve cases 
under investgaton (9,331) and cases pending payment (7,860).
5.  On  the  contrary,  our  report  specifcally  acknowledges  several  improvements  that  the 
Department put in place based upon informaton we presented during the course of our 
audit. However, we also cauton that it is too soon to determine the extent to which these 
eforts will reduce current backlogs. 
6.  The  Departments  response  demonstrates  a  fundamental  lack  of  understanding  of  the 
purposes  of  internal  control  and  managements  responsibility  to  adequately  safeguard 
public assets.  We consider this to be a signifcant defciency and a material deviaton from 
the minimum requirements established by the Comptrollers Standards for Internal Control 
in  New  York  State  Government.  These  dutes  are  incompatble  in  an  efectve  system  of 
internal  control  over  payment  transactons.  Individuals  who  are  responsible  for  record 
keeping and/or billing should never have direct access to payments.  Managements failure 
2013-S-38
Division of State Government Accountability   21
to separate these key functons, combined with its inability to monitor and assess day-to-
day payment plan operatons, substantally increases the risk that errors or irregularites 
may occur and remain undetected.