Emergency Rental Assistance: Treasury Should Improve Data Completeness and Public Reporting
Report Type |
Reports and Testimonies |
Report Date |
May 23, 2024 |
Release Date |
May 23, 2024 |
Report No. |
GAO-24-107084 |
Summary:
What GAO Found
The Department of the Treasury administers the Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA) program, which provides about $47 billion to tribal, state, territorial, and certain local governments and the District of Columbia (grantees). Congress appropriated ERA funding twice, and Treasury considers these appropriations as separate programs (ERA1 and ERA2). Grantees that submitted data to Treasury as of June 30, 2023, reported expending about 87 percent of total ERA funds.
Grantees' Total Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA1 and ERA2) Expenditures Publicly Reported, by Program
Note: For more details, see fig. 2 in GAO-24-107084.
Consistent with its prior work on ERA, GAO found Treasury had not collected complete ERA2 data or assessed the risk of improper payments. Treasury was not collecting complete data on the program's expenditures, demographics, and payments to households, as of June 30, 2023. For example, 3 percent of ERA2 grantees, whose funds totaled $581 million, did not submit required data for the second quarter of 2023. Also, Treasury said 10 percent of grantees whose funds totaled $787 million did not report data on payments made to individual households as of June 30, 2023. According to Treasury, all but five grantees reported household payment data for the fourth quarter of 2023. To help improve its data collection, Treasury has shifted from quarterly to cumulative reporting (which allows grantees to correct data reported in prior quarters), but significant data limitations remain. Treasury also has not assessed the program's risk of improper payments to households, which GAO identified as a significant risk. As GAO reported in 2022, improving ERA data collection and assessing improper payment risks would better position Treasury to oversee the ERA program and address program risks.
ERA2 publicly available quarterly reports contain some notes on general limitations to the reported data, but do not clearly disclose more specific limitations. Specifically, the reports do not disclose that the data may underreport ERA2 funds and payments to households because not all grantees reported complete information. The reports also do not disclose which or how many local jurisdictions have declined ERA2 funds and transferred those funds to their state or another locality. In addition, the reports do not explain that the demographic information provided on households receiving assistance represents only those grantees that provided such information, not all grantees. These specific omissions may lead a user of the reports to draw inaccurate conclusions about the ERA2 program. Clear disclosure on the limitations of the ERA2 data would facilitate interpretation of the data and give Congress and the public a better understanding of what is known about the program and its outcomes.
Why GAO Did This Study
The ERA program helps low-income households affected by the COVID-19 pandemic pay rent, utilities, and other housing-related costs. ERA1 funds have expired, but grantees are still expending ERA2 funds, which do not expire until September 2025.
The CARES Act includes a provision for GAO to monitor federal efforts to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. This report continues GAO's reporting on ERA and examines (1) the status of Treasury's efforts to ensure ERA has complete data and to address potential improper payments, and (2) Treasury's disclosure of the limitations of ERA2 data.
GAO analyzed ERA2 quarterly data on expenditures and household demographics and payments as of June 30, 2023, the most recent available at the time of analysis. GAO also compared Treasury's most recent publicly available reports (second quarter of 2023) against agency guidance and interviewed Treasury officials.
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