eCivis: How Kansas Effectively Distributed Over $1 Billion in CARES Act Funding

 



 

How Kansas Effectively Distributed Over $1 Billion in CARES Act Funding
By: eCivis on December 8, 2020

It goes without saying that 2020 has presented some serious challenges for state and local governments.

Never before have governments had to navigate the magnitude of funding–over $150 billion from the Coronavirus Relief Fund under the CARES Act– and distribute it in such a short amount of time.

Unlike the typical grants process, where you prepare a plan, indicate how you’re going to spend the money, do the work, and then get reimbursed, the urgent nature of the pandemic has forced governments to account for their spending in the aftermath.

So how can governments efficiently and transparently navigate this unchartered territory?

Learn more in our first-ever Hero Highlight (where we share how inspiring grants leaders and their associated governments innovatively managed their grant funding and delivered incredible impact to their communities).

Through a deliberate and careful process of strategic planning, Cheryl Harrison-Lee, Interim Executive Director of the Recovery Office (and our heroine of this hero highlight) helped the state of Kansas manage over $1.043 billion in CARES Act funding and established a framework that served as a financial reporting template for benchmarks and metrics. Cheryl shares the state of Kansas’ lessons learned and what other governments can do to ensure similar successes of their own.

Establish Community Priorities First

One of the most significant challenges for governments has been determining how and where to spend funding as effectively and efficiently as possible. During her tenure, Cheryl and her team focused on developing strategic priorities revolving around the biggest impacts of the pandemic: health, education, connectivity,  and the economy. Once they analyzed the major impacts of COVID-19, they were able to quickly delineate priorities at the state level and outline priorities at the county level as well.

Having served at the local, city, county, and state level, it was easy for Cheryl to apply her strategic planning and priority-based budgeting expertise that spoke to the needs of a wide variety of communities. Ultimately, the funding addressed healthcare (i.e. more testing) and helping small businesses reopen safely (i.e. PPE and business continuity). The most important distribution method for Cheryl and her team was using the reliable “tier method.”

“We implemented a tier system where the state distributes to the county and the county distributes to the cities,” Cheryl said. “This allows local governments to directly receive their money and work within their communities. Kansas has 103 counties so by staying at the county level, it allowed us to be efficient and expedient.”

This helped save significantly on the timeline of deciding who would get the funding, which would have been exacerbated if Cheryl and her team had to work with every single city and county within Kansas.

Avoid the “Government-Alone” Approach

Given the ever-narrowing timeframe that governments have to incur their CARES Act funding (Dec. 30th being the deadline), the state of Kansas would not have been able to navigate on its own. For Cheryl, bringing in the perspective and voices of stakeholders in the form of a steering committee (which served as a planning advisory committee) and executive committee (which functioned as the recommending body to the Governor and State Finance Council) was crucial.

She and her team sought input from a wide range of public and private-sector stakeholders, including representatives from health, businesses, education, construction, and banking/finance communities. It was especially important that these stakeholders represented many voices. For example, one of the executive board members was the president of the Kansas Hospital Association. Cheryl expressed that without these voices, she and her team would not have been able to access all the ideas that they could as well as ensure everyone had their needs met. For the state of Kansas, it was all hands on deck.

“In a moment of crisis, there’s a heavy lift and that load requires everyone lifting all at once, instead of a government alone approach,” Cheryl said.

Ultimately, by including a diverse group of stakeholders from the beginning, Cheryl and the stakeholder committees were able to help the state get $700 million approved and $400 million of that amount was disbursed within 60 days.  

What Governments Need to Do Now Before December 30th

According to Cheryl, it’s especially important that state governments do their utmost now to ensure subrecipient success. She advises that governments take the following steps before the big December deadline:

  • Return funding to the state if you cannot meet the deadline. If counties or local governments have to return any funding, they can return it to states, which can then be added to an unemployment compensation pool or redistribute to entities that have unmet needs. It’s important to send any funding back to states to expand programs they already have in place in alignment with the CARES Act, especially if you are unable to determine where you’re spending funds by the Dec. 30th deadline.

  • Engage your audit firm in advance. Make sure you have your auditors walk through every stage of the grants process with you. This way, as you establish priorities, distribute, and manage funding you know you’re going to meet all your audit requirements in advance. Also, it’s important to document EVERYTHING as you go and have electronic files available.

  • Establish a paper trail with your legal unit. With so many gray areas in the CARES Act, the state of Kansas set up a code interpretation unit with legal counsel so they could track and answer questions as they came up. This also ensured a paper trail was created which showed what decisions were made and how the government arrived at such decisions. Counties could also gain more clarity by being able to ask states about those gray areas and get legal interpretations of eligible expenditures, better ensuring they could justify their spending down the road.

 
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