The Washington State Auditor’s Office found problems in a sample of child care payments and estimates about $37 million in ...
Audits may surface challenging issues for agencies, but they are critical to maintaining public trust,” the state auditor ...
Washington made an estimated $37 million in questionable child care payments over the course of a year using federal dollars, ...
A report the state auditor released this week looks at federal funding handled by the state. It comes amid nationwide claims ...
The move follows an audit of the state's earlier voucher program that revealed concerning shortcomings in the program’s ...
A statewide audit examining how nearly $24 billion in federal funding was spent in fiscal year 2025 estimated that Washington ...
The Office of the Washington State Auditor completes a yearly audit of federal funding across 28 programs within the state.
A new state audit is raising serious concerns about how taxpayer money is being handled in Washington. Senate Republican Leader John Braun says the findings reveal “nothing short of a systemic failure ...
The Hill should be all over this issue but not sure anyone is paying any attention to this over there,” Bill Greenwalt said.
Washington state officials say a recent audit that found an estimated $37 million in questionable child care subsidy payments ...
A weakness in the system used to detect improper payments in subsidized child care contributed to an estimated $37M in questionable payments.
Covering for sick and injured employees is costing the city tens of millions of dollars — and the problem is growing.