As of Monday, April 2, OCCA will be moving its main office to Mohican Farm, 7193 State Highway 80, Cooperstown, NY 13326. Please stop by for a tour of the new site when we are settled in, on the corner of Allen Lake Road in the Town of Springfield! Executive Director Darla M. Youngs, Environmental Planner Rima Shamieh and Program Director Travis Sauerwald will be based in this new location. Martha Clarvoe, OCCA special projects manager, will retain a satellite office at 101 Main Street, Cooperstown. Our phone numbers will remain the same. Please note: We may have limited phone and e-mail access until April 3.
Darla M. Youngs, Executive Director
Otsego County Conservation Association
101 Main Street, PO Box 931
Cooperstown, NY 13326
(607) 547-4488; www.occainfo.org
Friday, March 30, 2012
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Fraud Detection Training
DiNapoli Launches New Fraud Detection Training Initiative for Not-for-Profits
New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli today announced a new training program for not-for-profit officials to help them prevent and detect fraud and protect taxpayer dollars."New York not-for-profits manage billions of dollars. They contract with the state and other local governments to provide crucial services to New York families," DiNapoli said. "This training course will strengthen their financial management practices and ability to detect and prevent fraud."
The program includes case studies of actual fraud uncovered by state auditors and simple fraud detection tools to assist not-for-profits of all sizes. Taught by state forensic auditors in DiNapoli's office, the program also provides a risk assessment model to help identify the most cost-effective ways to fight waste, fraud and abuse, and meets continuing professional education requirements for eligible accountants.
The first training will be held at the Long Island Center for Nonprofit Leadership at Adelphi University in Garden City on March 1 at 8:30 am. A seminar will also be held in Buffalo on March 16 at 8:30am at the Meals on Wheels Community Learning Center in conjunction with the United Way of Buffalo & Erie County. Additional sessions will be scheduled around the state.
"Bad things can happen to good organizations," said Ann Marie Thigpen, Executive Director of the Long Island Center for NFP Leadership. "It is critical to protect, as best we can, our organization's mission and integrity along with our stakeholders' trust. Thanks to the Comptroller's office, we now have a resource for learning how to ensure that systems and practices are in place to minimize the opportunity for those dishonest few who prey on the good work that we do."
DiNapoli's office is responsible for reviewing and auditing not-for-profit contracts awarded through state agencies. In 2009-2010, DiNapoli met with not-for-profit leaders throughout the state about challenges they were facing in light of the severe national recession. His office also looked at the economic impact of not-for-profits in the state and made recommendations for reforming and modernizing the contracts and payment process. This new training, developed in collaboration with not-for-profit organizations around the state, will help protect limited resources.
The original article can be found here:
http://www.osc.state.ny.us/press/releases/feb12/022812a.htm
For more on the Comptroller's Fraud Detection & Prevention seminars click on the following:
http://osc.state.ny.us/reports/other/li_ctr_nonprofit_leadership.pdf
http://osc.state.ny.us/reports/other/united_way_buffalo.pdf
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