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entitled 'Federal Farm Programs: USDA Needs to Strengthen Controls to 
Prevent Improper Payments to Estates and Deceased Individuals' which 
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Report to the Ranking Member, Committee on Finance, U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

July 2007: 

Federal Farm Programs: 

USDA Needs to Strengthen Controls to Prevent Improper Payments to 
Estates and Deceased Individuals: 

GAO-07-818: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-07-818, a report to the Ranking Member, Committee on 
Finance, U.S. Senate 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Farmers receive about $20 billion annually in federal farm program 
payments, which go to individuals and “entities,” including 
corporations, partnerships, and estates. Under certain conditions, 
estates may receive payments for the first 2 years after an 
individual’s death. For later years, the U.S. Department of Agriculture 
(USDA) must determine that the estate is not being kept open for 
payments. 

As requested, GAO evaluated the extent to which USDA (1) follows its 
regulations that are intended to provide reasonable assurance that farm 
program payments go only to eligible estates and (2) makes improper 
payments to deceased individuals. GAO reviewed a nonrandom sample of 
estates based, in part, on the amount of payments an estate received 
and compared USDA’s databases that identify payment recipients with 
individuals the Social Security Administration listed as deceased. 

What GAO Found: 

USDA has made farm payments to estates more than 2 years after 
recipients died, without determining, as its regulations require, 
whether the estates were kept open to receive these payments. As a 
result, USDA cannot be assured that farm payments are not going to 
estates kept open primarily to obtain these payments. From 1999 through 
2005, USDA did not conduct any eligibility determinations for 73, or 40 
percent, of the 181 estates GAO reviewed. Sixteen of these 73 estates 
had each received more than $200,000 in farm payments, and 4 had each 
received more than $500,000. Also, for the 108 reviews USDA did 
conduct, GAO identified shortcomings. For example, from 1999 through 
2005, 69 of the 108 estates did not receive annual reviews for every 
year of payments received, and some USDA field offices approved groups 
of estates for payments without reviewing each estate. Furthermore, 20 
estates that USDA approved for payment eligibility had no documented 
explanation for keeping the estate open. 

USDA cannot be assured that millions of dollars in farm payments are 
proper. It does not have management controls to verify that it is not 
making payments to deceased individuals. For 1999 through 2005, USDA 
paid $1.1 billion in farm payments in the names of 172,801 deceased 
individuals (either as an individual recipient or as a member of an 
entity). Of this total, 40 percent went to those who had been dead for 
3 or more years, and 19 percent to those dead for 7 or more years. Most 
of these payments were made to deceased individuals indirectly (i.e., 
as members of farming entities). For example, over one-half of the $1.1 
billion payments went through entities from 1999 through 2005. In one 
case, USDA paid a member of an entity—deceased since 1995—over $400,000 
in payments for 1999 through 2005. USDA relies on the farming 
operation’s self-certification that the information provided is 
accurate and that the operation will inform USDA of any changes, such 
as the death of a member. Such notification would provide USDA with 
current information to determine the eligibility of the entity to 
receive the payments. The complex nature of some farming 
operations—such as entities embedded within other entities—can make it 
difficult for USDA to avoid making payments to deceased individuals. 

Figure: Number of Deceased Individuals Receiving Farm Payments through 
Entities, 1999-2005: 

[See PDF for Image] 

Source: GAO's analysis of USDA's data. 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that USDA conduct all required annual estate eligibility 
determinations, implement management controls to verify that an 
individual receiving program payments has not died, and determine if 
these payments have been made to deceased individuals or to entities 
that failed to disclose the death of a member, and if so, recover the 
appropriate amounts. USDA agreed with these recommendations and has 
begun actions to implement them. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-818]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Lisa Shames at (202) 512-
3841 or shamesl@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Because Many FSA Field Offices Do Not Systematically Determine the 
Eligibility of Estates for Farm Program Payments, FSA Cannot Be Assured 
That Payments Are Proper: 

Because FSA Does Not Have Appropriate Management Controls, It Cannot Be 
Assured That It Is Not Making Payments to Deceased Individuals: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Comments from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

GAO's Comments: 

Appendix III: U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Program Payments, 
Fiscal Years 1999 through 2005: 

Appendix IV: U.S. Department of Agriculture Estate Eligibility Reviews, 
by State, Program Years 1999 through 2005: 

Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Estate Eligibility Reviews, Program Years 1999 through 2005: 

Table 2: Variation in Determinations FSA Made for Selected States, 
Program Years 1999 through 2005: 

Table 3: USDA Estimates of Improper Payments, Fiscal Year 2006: 

Table 4: Farm Program Payments Made to Deceased Individuals through 
Entities, Program Years 1999 through 2005: 

Table 5: Variation in Reviews Conducted by FSA, by State, Program Years 
1999 through 2005: 

Figure: 

Figure 1: Number of Years and Value of Farm Program Payments Made after 
Individuals' Deaths, Fiscal Years 1999 through 2005: 

Abbreviations: 

EQIP: Environmental Quality Incentives Program: 
FSA: Farm Service Agency: 
IPIA: Improper Payments Information Act of 2002: 
OMB: Office of Management and Budget: 
USDA: U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 9, 2007: 

The Honorable Charles E. Grassley: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Finance: 
United States Senate: 

Dear Senator Grassley: 

Farmers receive about $20 billion annually in federal farm program 
payments for crop subsidies, conservation practices, and disasters. 
Such payments go to 1.7 million recipients, both individuals and 
"entities," including corporations, partnerships, and estates. 
Individuals may receive farm program payments indirectly through as 
many as three entities.[Footnote 1] The Agricultural Reconciliation Act 
of 1987 (1987 Act) limits payments to individuals and entities that are 
"actively engaged in farming." We reported in 2004 that because the 
U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) regulations ensuring that 
recipients are actively engaged in farming do not specify measurable 
standards, they allow individuals with limited involvement in farming 
to qualify for farm program payments.[Footnote 2] We recommended that 
USDA strengthen its regulations for active engagement in farming. 
Subsequently, in November 2006, we identified the need for better 
oversight of farm program payments.[Footnote 3] Without better 
oversight to ensure that farm program funds are spent as economically, 
efficiently, and effectively as possible, we pointed out, USDA has 
little assurance that these funds benefit the agricultural sector as 
intended. 

From 1999 through 2005, USDA, through its Farm Service Agency (FSA), 
made 124 million payments totaling about $130 billion. Over $200 
million of this amount went to nearly 42,000 estates. Generally, under 
the 1987 Act, once a person dies, farm program payments may continue to 
that person's estate under certain conditions. However, if no estate is 
probated, or once the estate is settled, the deceased person's heirs 
must qualify in their own right in order to receive payments. 

USDA regulations covering most farm program payments allow an estate to 
receive payments for the first 2 years after the death of the 
individual if the estate meets certain eligibility requirements for 
active engagement in farming. That is, an estate must contribute (1) 
capital, land, or equipment and (2) the personal representative or 
heirs of the estate must contribute labor or management to the farming 
operation.[Footnote 4] Following the initial 2 years, the estate will 
continue to be eligible for program payments if it meets the active 
engagement in farming requirement and the local field office determines 
that the estate is not being kept open primarily to continue receiving 
program payments. Estates are commonly kept open for longer than 2 
years because of, among other things, asset distribution and probate 
complications, and tax and debt obligations. Under USDA regulations, 
for an estate to remain eligible for farm program payments, FSA must 
annually determine that the estate is still active and that obtaining 
farm program payments is not the primary reason it remains open. FSA 
guidelines provide that each estate should provide documents showing 
why it has not distributed its assets to its beneficiaries and why it 
is still active for the current year. When property is completely 
distributed from the deceased individual to his or her heirs directly 
or through an estate, the payments to the individual who died must end. 
However, the deceased individual's heirs may subsequently apply for 
program payments in their own right and to receive payments must 
satisfy the requirements for active engagement in farming. 

FSA guidance directs county committee staff to annually notify 
individuals and entities that they must file farm operating plans with 
their local field office if they are seeking farm program payments. 
These plans document the name of each recipient, the contribution each 
recipient makes to the farming operation, and the share of profits and 
losses each recipient will receive. The individual filing this plan 
certifies that, in a timely manner, he or she will notify the local 
field office of any changes in the information that could affect an 
eligibility determination, such as the death of an individual in the 
farming operation. If timely notification is not given, the farming 
operation is subject to forfeiture of payments. Also, payments must be 
returned if they were based on erroneous information or if the producer 
is otherwise not entitled to them. 

You asked us to examine FSA's implementation of regulations to identify 
improper payments to estates and deceased individuals. As agreed with 
your office, we evaluated the extent to which FSA (1) follows its 
regulations that are intended to provide reasonable assurance that farm 
program payments go only to eligible estates and (2) makes improper 
payments to deceased individuals. 

To address these issues, we reviewed USDA's regulations, FSA's 
guidelines, and other management controls for implementing the 
provisions of the 1987 Act. We also spoke with FSA officials in 
headquarters, state offices, and local field offices who are 
responsible for ensuring that (1) estates are properly reviewed for 
eligibility and (2) payments are not made to deceased individuals. To 
evaluate FSA's application of regulations and guidance and to assess 
the overall effectiveness of its review process for deciding whether 
estates are eligible to receive farm program payments, we reviewed a 
nonrandom sample of estate eligibility determinations. To identify 
estates for our nonrandom sample, we obtained and analyzed FSA's 
computer databases for information on payment recipients from 1999 
through 2005. The databases contained detailed information on payment 
recipients--including Social Security numbers, payment amounts, the 
status of recipients as individuals or members of entities, recipients' 
ownership interests in entities, types of entities receiving payments, 
and additional organizational details. The data showed 2,841 estates 
that had received payments for more than 2 years between 1999 and 2005, 
thus requiring FSA to conduct a determination of eligibility. Of these, 
we examined 181 estates in 26 states and 142 counties. These estates 
included the 162 (i.e., 162 of 2,841) that received over $100,000 in 
farm program payments from 1999 through 2005. They also included the 16 
estates (i.e., 16 of 2,841) that (1) had received between $50,000 and 
$100,000 in farm program payments during this period and (2) had at 
least one member receiving payments through three other entities. 
Lastly, they included the three estates (i.e., 3 of 2,841) that had at 
least one member who appeared to be receiving payments through seven or 
more other entities. For each estate selected, we obtained files from 
FSA field offices. These files ideally would have included the 
following information to facilitate FSA's determinations: letters 
testamentary from a probate court, minutes of the FSA county committee 
meeting that approved eligibility,[Footnote 5] explanation letters or 
documentation for the reason the estate remained active beyond 2 years, 
farm operating plans, and payment history. However, because the 
documentation required for probated estates varies by jurisdiction, we 
could not easily determine whether improper payments had been made to 
estates. Furthermore, even in cases in which FSA had not done the 
required annual determinations, or when relevant documentation was 
missing or incomplete in the estate file, we could not determine 
whether improper payments were made without examining each case in 
depth. 

In examining the extent to which FSA makes improper payments to 
deceased individuals after the date of their death, we matched the 
payment recipients in FSA's databases with individuals that the Social 
Security Administration has identified as deceased in its Death Master 
File. The data match showed the number and dollar amount of payments 
FSA provided to deceased individuals, either directly or indirectly 
through entities, from 1999 through 2005. We attributed payments made 
indirectly to individuals based on each individual's ownership share in 
the entity. 

We conducted our review from June 2006 through May 2007 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards, which included 
an assessment of data reliability and internal controls. Appendix I 
contains more detailed information on our scope and methodology. 

Results in Brief: 

FSA made farm program payments to estates more than 2 years after 
recipients have died without determining whether the estates were being 
kept open primarily for the purpose of receiving these payments, as its 
regulations require. As a result, FSA cannot be assured that farm 
program payments made to these estates are proper. We identified 
weaknesses in FSA's eligibility determinations for 142 of the 181 
estates we reviewed. In particular, from 1999 through 2005, FSA did not 
conduct eligibility determinations for 73, or 40 percent, of the 181 
estates in our sample. Sixteen of these 73 estates had each received 
more than $200,000 in farm program payments, and 4 had each received 
more than $500,000. For the remaining 108 estates, we identified 
several shortcomings with FSA's determinations. Specifically, FSA did 
not make an annual eligibility determination for every year in which it 
provided payments, as regulations require. From 1999 through 2005, 69 
of the 108 estates did not receive determinations for every year in 
which they received payments, and some FSA field offices approved 
groups of estates for payments without reviewing each estate 
individually. Moreover, documentation supporting the determinations was 
often either nonexistent or vague. For example, 20 of the 
determinations had no documented explanation for why the estate 
remained active. In other cases, FSA approved eligibility based on 
insufficient explanations for why the estate remained open--such as the 
heirs stating that they wanted to keep it open on the advice of a 
lawyer or an accountant without specifying the reasons why. We also 
found that although the minutes of FSA county committee meetings 
indicated approval of payments to estates, the associated files did not 
contain critical documents that might validate why the estates were 
still active for reasons other than to obtain farm program payments. 
According to FSA field officials, many eligibility determinations were 
either not done or not done thoroughly, in part because of a lack of 
sufficient personnel and time, as well as competing priorities for 
carrying out farm programs. 

FSA cannot be assured that millions of dollars in farm payments it made 
are proper because FSA does not have management controls, such as 
computer matching, to verify that it is not making payments to deceased 
individuals. Instead, according to the FSA field officials, FSA relies 
on self-certifications by farming operations that the information 
provided is accurate and that the operations will inform FSA of any 
changes, including the death of an operation's member. From 1999 
through 2005, FSA paid $1.1 billion in farm program payments in the 
names of 172,801 deceased individuals (either as an individual or as a 
member of an entity). Of this amount, 40 percent went to individuals 
who had been dead for 3 or more years, and 19 percent went to 
individuals who had been dead for 7 or more years. Furthermore, complex 
farming operations consisting of multiple entities increase the risk of 
improper payments to deceased individuals. Farm program payments made 
to deceased individuals indirectly--that is, as members of entities-- 
represent a disproportionately high share of post-death payments. We 
found that these payments to deceased individuals through entities 
accounted for $648 million--or 58 percent of the $1.1 billion in 
payments made to all deceased individuals from 1999 through 2005-- 
whereas payments to all individuals through entities accounted for only 
27 percent of all farm program payments. In one case, FSA paid a member 
of an entity who has been deceased since 1995 over $400,000 in farm 
program payments from 1999 through 2005. 

We are making a number of recommendations to the Secretary of 
Agriculture for improving FSA's ability to prevent improper payments to 
estates and deceased individuals. Specifically, we are recommending 
that FSA ensure that its field offices conduct all annual estate 
eligibility determinations as required, implement management controls 
to verify that individuals receiving farm program payments have not 
died, and determine if program payments have been made to deceased 
individuals or to entities that failed to disclose the death of a 
member and if so, recover the appropriate amounts. In addition, we have 
referred the cases of improper payments we identify in this report to 
USDA's Office of Inspector General for further investigation. 

We provided FSA with a draft of this report for review and comment. FSA 
agreed with our recommendations and already has begun to take actions 
to implement them. However, FSA did not agree with our use of the term 
"improper payments" in the report. The agency stated that the payments 
we describe do not meet the definition of improper payments under the 
Improper Payments Information Act of 2002 (IPIA).[Footnote 6] We 
disagree. We believe the payments we highlight in three examples in the 
report do meet the definition of improper payments under IPIA. 
Furthermore, in these cases, officials in FSA's field offices agreed 
with our findings and told us they intend to recover the payments. For 
the remaining farm program payments identified in the report, we 
continue to believe that the potential exists for improper payments 
because of the lack of FSA management controls and the complexity of 
some of the farming operations involved. Our detailed response to 
USDA's comments appears at the end of this letter and following USDA's 
written comments in appendix II. 

Background: 

FSA provides benefits through various programs of the Farm Security and 
Rural Investment Act of 2002.[Footnote 7] Appendix III provides a 
listing of USDA farm programs and payments made from 1999 through 2005. 
The three-entity rule applies to certain USDA payments, including 
direct and counter-cyclical payments; loan deficiency payments and 
marketing loan gains, under the Marketing Assistance Loan Program; and 
Conservation Reserve Program payments. 

* Direct and Counter-Cyclical Payments Program provides two types of 
payments to producers of covered commodity crops, including corn, 
cotton, rice, soybeans, and wheat. Direct payments (formerly known as 
production flexibility contract payments) are tied to a fixed payment 
rate for each commodity crop and do not depend on current production or 
current market prices. Instead, direct payments are based on the farm's 
historical acreage and yields. Counter-cyclical payments provide price- 
dependent benefits for covered commodities whenever the effective price 
for the commodity is less than a pre-determined price (called the 
target price). Counter-cyclical payments are based on a farm's 
historical acreage and yields, and are not tied to the current 
production of the covered commodity. 

* Marketing Assistance Loan Program (formerly known as the Commodity 
Loan Program) provides benefits to producers of covered commodity crops 
when market prices are low. Specifically, the federal government 
accepts harvested crops as collateral for interest-bearing loans 
(marketing assistance loans) that are due in 9 months. When market 
prices drop below the loan rate (the loan price per pound or bushel), 
the government allows farmers to repay the loan at a lower rate and 
retain ownership of their commodity for eventual sale. The difference 
between the loan rate and the lower repayment rate is called the 
marketing assistance loan gain. In lieu of repaying the loan, farmers 
may forfeit their crops to the government when the loan matures and 
keep the loan principal. In addition, farmers who do not have marketing 
assistance loans can receive a benefit when prices are low--the loan 
deficiency payment--that is equal to the marketing assistance loan gain 
that the farmer would have received if the farmer had a loan. Finally, 
farmers can purchase commodity certificates that allow them to redeem 
their marketing assistance loan at a lower repayment rate and 
immediately reclaim their commodities under loan. The difference 
between the loan rate and the lower repayment rate is called the 
commodity certificate gain. 

* Conservation Reserve Program provides annual rental payments and cost-
share assistance to producers to help them safeguard environmentally 
sensitive land. Producers must contractually agree to retire their land 
from agricultural purposes and keep it in approved conserving uses for 
10 to 15 years. 

Most farmers receive farm program payments directly from FSA as an 
individual operator. However, some farmers use legal entities to 
organize their farming operations to reduce their exposure to financial 
liabilities or estate taxes or, in some cases, to increase their 
potential for farm benefits. Some of the more common ways farmers 
organize their operations include the following: 

* Corporations have a separate legal existence from their owners; that 
is, the corporation, rather than the owners, is ordinarily responsible 
for farm business debts and can be sued. As a result, some individuals 
may incorporate their farm to protect their personal assets. 

* General partnerships are a simple arrangement of two or more 
partners--individuals or entities--that do business together. Partners 
are personally liable for their own conduct and for the conduct of 
those under their direct supervision, as well as for negligence, 
wrongful acts, and misconduct of other partners and partnership 
employees. Partners are also personally liable for the partnership's 
commercial obligations, such as loans or taxes. 

* Joint ventures are two or more individuals who pool resources and 
share profits or losses. Joint ventures have no legal existence 
independent of their owners. Members in a joint venture are personally 
liable for the farm's debts. 

* Limited partnerships are an arrangement of two or more partners whose 
liability for partnership financial obligations is only as great as the 
amount of their investment. A limited partnership must have at least 
one general partner who manages the farm business and who is fully 
liable for partnership financial obligations to be considered eligible 
for farm program payments. 

* Trusts (irrevocable and revocable) are arrangements generally used in 
estate planning that provide for the management and distribution of 
property. A revocable trust is amendable by the grantor during his or 
her lifetime who may also be the trustee and beneficiary. An 
irrevocable trust is an arrangement in which the grantor departs with 
ownership and control of property. 

* Other types of entities that may qualify for farm program payments 
under payment limitation rules include a limited liability company--a 
hybrid form of a business entity with the limited liability feature of 
a corporation and the income tax treatment of a general partnership; a 
charitable organization; and a state or political subdivision. 

FSA is responsible for ensuring that recipients meet payment 
eligibility criteria and do not receive payments that exceed the 
established limitations. It carries out this responsibility through its 
headquarters office, 50 state offices, and over 2,300 field offices. 

IPIA requires the heads of federal agencies to annually review all 
programs and activities that they administer, identify those that may 
be susceptible to significant improper payments, and estimate and 
report on the annual amount of improper payments in those programs and 
activities. IPIA defines an improper payment as any payment that should 
not have been made or that was made in an incorrect amount, including 
any payment to an ineligible recipient. 

OMB defines significant improper payments as payments in any particular 
program that exceed both 2.5 percent of total program payments and $10 
million annually. If a program's estimated improper payments exceed $10 
million in a year, IPIA and related OMB guidance requires agencies to 
prepare and implement a plan to reduce improper payments and report 
actions taken. Agencies are required to report this information, among 
other things, annually in their Performance and Accountability Reports. 
Specifically, OMB guidance requires agencies to report on (1) the 
causes of improper payments and corrective actions, (2) the steps the 
agency has undertaken to ensure that agency managers are held 
accountable for reducing and recovering erroneous payments, along with 
a realistic timetable, and (3) any statutory or regulatory barriers 
that may limit the agency's corrective actions in reducing improper 
payments. In November 2006, we reported that federal agencies, 
including USDA, need to improve their reporting of improper payments 
under IPIA by better identifying programs susceptible to improper 
payments and improving statistical sampling methodologies to estimate 
improper payments made.[Footnote 8] 

Because Many FSA Field Offices Do Not Systematically Determine the 
Eligibility of Estates for Farm Program Payments, FSA Cannot Be Assured 
That Payments Are Proper: 

While there are legitimate reasons for keeping estates open, we found 
that FSA field offices do not systematically determine the eligibility 
of all estates that have been kept open for more than 2 years, as 
regulations require, and when they do conduct eligibility 
determinations, the quality of the determinations varies. Without 
performing annual determinations, an essential management control, FSA 
cannot identify estates being kept open primarily for the purpose of 
receiving these payments and be assured that the payments are proper. 

We identified weaknesses in FSA's eligibility determinations for 142 of 
the 181 estates we reviewed. In particular, FSA did not conduct any 
program eligibility determinations for 73, or 40 percent, of estates 
that required a determination from 1999 through 2005. Because FSA did 
not conduct the required determinations, the extent to which estates 
remained open for reasons other than for obtaining program payments is 
not known. Sixteen of these 73 estates received more than $200,000 in 
farm program payments and 4 received more than $500,000 during this 
period. In addition, 22 of the 73 estates had received no eligibility 
determinations during the 7-year period we reviewed, and these estates 
had been open and receiving payments for more than 10 years. In one 
case, we found that the estate has been open since 1973. The following 
provides examples of estates that received farm program payments but 
were not reviewed for eligibility by FSA: 

* A North Dakota estate received farm program payments totaling 
$741,000 from 1999 through 2003, but FSA did not conduct the required 
determinations. 

* An Alabama estate received payments totaling $567,000 from 1999 
through 2005, but FSA did not conduct the required determinations. In 
this case, the estate has been open since 1981. 

* Two estates in Georgia, open since 1989 and 1996, respectively, 
received payments totaling more than $330,000 each, from 1999 through 
2005. Neither estate received the required determinations for any of 
the years we reviewed. 

* An estate in New Mexico, open since 1991, received $320,000 from 1999 
through 2005, but it did not receive any of the required 
determinations. 

According to FSA field officials, many determinations were either not 
done or not done thoroughly, in part because of a lack of sufficient 
personnel and time, as well as competing priorities for carrying out 
farm programs. However, FSA's failure to conduct appropriate 
eligibility determinations means that it has no assurance that it is 
not making farm program payments to estates that have been kept open 
primarily to receive these payments. 

Even when FSA field offices determined estates' eligibility for 
continued farm program payments, they did not always do so 
consistently. For the remaining 108 estates, 39 had eligibility 
determinations every year that a determination was required, while 69 
had determinations at least once between 1999 and 2005, but not with 
the frequency required by regulations. Table 1 shows the number of 
years for which estates in our sample were required to have annual 
eligibility determinations compared with the number of years that FSA 
actually conducted determinations. The dark shaded numbers highlight 
the number of estates that received all the required annual eligibility 
determinations for the years that the estate received farm program 
payments--a total of 39 estates. 

Table 1: Estate Eligibility Reviews, Program Years 1999 through 2005: 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 
None; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: 19; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: 14; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: 7; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: 6; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: 5; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: 9; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 13; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 73. 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 1; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: 10; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: 7; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: 2; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: 4; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: 6; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: 6; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 4; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 39. 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 2; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: 10; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: 0; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: 2; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: 1; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: 4; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 6; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 23. 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 3; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: 9; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: 1; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: 4; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: 2; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 1; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 17. 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 4; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: 2; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: 3; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: 3; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 4; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 12. 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 5; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: 5; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: 3; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 3; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 11. 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 6; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: [Empty];
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: 1; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 3; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 4. 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 7; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: [Empty]; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 2; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 2. 

Number of years FSA actually conducted eligibility determinations: 
Total; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 1: 
Estates: 29; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 2: 
Estates: 31; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 3: 
Estates: 18; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 4: 
Estates: 15; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 5: 
Estates: 24; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 6: 
Estates: 28; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: 7: 
Estates: 36; 
Number of years FSA should have conducted eligibility reviews: Total: 
Estates: 181. 

Additional Information: 

Signifies the number of estates that received all required 
determinations--a total of 39 estates. 

Signifies the number of estates that received at least one, but not all 
annual determinations--a total of 69 estates. 

Source: GAO's analysis of FSA's data. 

Note: Cells are left blank for years an eligibility determination was 
not required. 

[End of table] 

As the table shows, the longer an estate was kept open, the fewer 
determinations it received. For example, only 2 of the 36 estates 
requiring a determination every year over the 7-year period received 
all seven required determinations. 

According to FSA guidelines, an estate should provide evidence that it 
is still making required reports to the court to be eligible for farm 
program payments. However, we found that FSA sometimes approved 
eligibility for payments when the estate had provided insufficient 
information--that is, information that was either nonexistent or vague. 
For example, in 20 of the 108 determinations, the minutes of FSA county 
committee meetings indicated approval of eligibility for payments to 
estates, but the associated files did not contain any documents that 
explained why the estate remained active. FSA also approved eligibility 
on the basis of insufficient explanations for keeping the estate open. 
In five cases, executors explained that they did not want to close the 
estate but did not explain why. In a sixth case, documentation stated 
that the estate was remaining active upon the advice of its lawyers and 
accountants, but did not explain why. 

Furthermore, some FSA field offices approved program payments to groups 
of estates that were kept open after 2 years without any apparent 
review. In one case in Georgia, minutes of an FSA county committee 
meeting listed 107 estates as eligible for payments by stating that the 
county committee approved all estates open over 2 years. Two of the 
estates on this list of 107 were part of the sample that we reviewed in 
detail. In addition, another 10 estates in our sample, from nine 
different FSA field offices, were also approved for payments without 
any indication that even a cursory review had been conducted. 

Additionally, the extent to which FSA field offices make eligibility 
determinations varies from state to state, which suggests that FSA is 
not consistently implementing its eligibility rules. Overall, FSA field 
offices in 16 of the 26 states we reviewed made less than one-half of 
the required determinations of their estates. For example, in Alabama 
and in Georgia, FSA field offices made only 22 percent and 31 percent 
of the required determinations for estates, respectively, compared with 
FSA field offices in Kansas and Texas, which made 62 percent and 87 
percent of the required determinations, respectively. Table 2 shows, 
for the 181 estates in our sample, the variation in FSA's conduct of 
eligibility reviews from 1999 through 2005 in states that had five or 
more estates to examine. Appendix IV shows the extent to which FSA 
conducted estate eligibility determinations in each state in our 
review. 

Table 2: Variation in Determinations FSA Made for Selected States, 
Program Years 1999 through 2005: 

State: Alabama; 
Number of estates requiring determinations: 9; 
Number of estates reviewed: 2; 
Percent reviewed: 22.2. 

State: Arkansas; 
Number of estates requiring determinations: 12; 
Number of estates reviewed: 8; 
Percent reviewed: 66.7. 

State: Georgia; 
Number of estates requiring determinations: 16; 
Number of estates reviewed: 5; 
Percent reviewed: 31.3. 

State: Illinois; 
Number of estates requiring determinations: 20; 
Number of estates reviewed: 13; 
Percent reviewed: 65.0. 

State: Kansas; 
Number of estates requiring determinations: 13; 
Number of estates reviewed: 8; 
Percent reviewed: 61.5. 

State: Texas; 
Number of estates requiring determinations: 63; 
Number of estates reviewed: 55; 
Percent reviewed: 87.3. 

State: Washington; 
Number of estates requiring determinations: 8; 
Number of estates reviewed: 3; 
Percent reviewed: 37.5. 

State: Total; 
Number of estates requiring determinations: 141; 
Number of estates reviewed: 94; 
Percent reviewed: 66.7. 

Source: GAO's analysis of FSA's data. 

Note: This table presents the states in our sample that had at least 
five estates to review from 1999 through 2005. 

[End of table] 

Under the three-entity rule, individuals receiving program payments may 
not hold a substantial beneficial interest in more than two entities 
also receiving payments. However, because a beneficiary of an Arkansas 
estate we reviewed received farm program payments through the estate in 
2005, as well as through three other entities, the beneficiary was able 
to receive payments beyond what the three-entity rule would have 
allowed. FSA was unaware of this situation until we brought it to 
officials' attention, and FSA has begun taking steps to recover any 
improper payments. Had FSA conducted any eligibility determinations for 
this estate during the period, it might have determined that the estate 
was not eligible for these payments, preventing the beneficiary from 
receiving what amounted to a payment through a fourth entity. 

We informed FSA of the problems we uncovered during the course of our 
review. According to FSA field officials, a lack of sufficient 
personnel and time, and competing priorities for carrying out farm 
programs explain, in part, why many determinations were either not 
conducted or not conducted thoroughly. Nevertheless, officials told us 
that they would investigate these cases for potential receipt of 
improper payments and would start collection proceedings if they found 
improper payments. 

Because FSA Does Not Have Appropriate Management Controls, It Cannot Be 
Assured That It Is Not Making Payments to Deceased Individuals: 

FSA cannot be assured that millions of dollars in farm program payments 
it made to thousands of deceased individuals from fiscal years 1999 
through 2005 were proper because FSA does not have appropriate 
management controls, such as computer matching, to verify that it is 
not making payments to deceased individuals. For example, FSA is not 
matching recipients listed in its payment database with individuals 
listed as deceased in the Social Security Administration's Death Master 
File. In addition, complex farming operations, such as corporations or 
general partnerships with embedded entities, make it difficult for FSA 
to prevent improper payments to deceased individuals. At present, FSA 
relies on farming operations to advise the agency of any change in the 
operation, including the death of a member that would affect payments 
made to the operation. 

FSA Made Millions of Dollars of Farm Program Payments to Deceased 
Individuals from Fiscal Years 1999 through 2005: 

From fiscal years 1999 through 2005, FSA paid $1.1 billion in farm 
program payments to 172,801 deceased individuals--either as individuals 
or as members of entities, according to our matching of FSA's payment 
databases with the Social Security Administration's Death Master File. 
Of the $1.1 billion in farm payments, 40 percent went to individuals 
who had been dead for 3 or more years, and 19 percent went to 
individuals who had been dead for 7 or more years. Figure 1 shows the 
number of years in which FSA made farm program payments after an 
individual had died and the value of those payments. As the figure 
shows, for example, FSA provided $210 million in farm program payments 
to deceased individuals 7 or more years after their date of death. 

Figure 1: Number of Years and Value of Farm Program Payments Made after 
Individuals' Deaths, Fiscal Years 1999 through 2005: 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO's analysis of FSA's and Social Security Administration's 
data. 

Note: Farm program payments made through entities are based on program 
year data. 

[A] Includes payments made 1 day after death to 1 year after death. 

[End of figure] 

Three cases illustrate how FSA's lack of management controls can result 
in improper payments to deceased individuals. In the first case, FSA 
provided more than $400,000 in farm program payments from 1999 through 
2005 to an Illinois farming operation on the basis of the ownership 
interest of an individual who had died in 1995.[Footnote 9] According 
to FSA's records, the farming operation consisted of about 1,900 
cropland acres producing mostly corn and soybeans. It was organized as 
a corporation with four shareholders, with the deceased individual 
owning a 40.3-percent interest in the entity. Nonetheless, we found 
that the deceased individual had resided in Florida. Another member of 
this farming operation, who resided in Illinois and had signature 
authority for the operation, updated the operating plan most recently 
in 2004 but failed to notify FSA of the individual's death. The farming 
operation therefore continued to qualify for farm program payments on 
behalf of the deceased individual. As noted earlier, FSA requires 
farming operations to certify that they will notify FSA of any change 
in their operation and to provide true and correct information. 
According to USDA regulations, failure to do so may result in 
forfeiture of payments and an assessment of a penalty. FSA recognized 
this problem in December 2006 when the children of the deceased 
individual contacted the FSA field office to obtain signature authority 
for the operation. FSA has begun proceedings to collect the improper 
payments. 

In the second case, FSA provided more than $200,000 in farm program 
payments from 1999 through 2002 to an Indiana farming operation on the 
basis of the ownership interest of an individual who had died in 1993. 
According to FSA's records, the farming operation was a corporation, 
and the deceased individual held 100-percent ownership interest in the 
entity. The corporation operated farms in two counties, but upon the 
death of the individual, the corporation failed to notify the FSA field 
office in either county of the death. The corporation therefore 
continued to receive farm program payments on behalf of the deceased 
individual until 2002, when it filed a new farm operating plan with FSA 
that no longer included the deceased individual as a member. When we 
brought this case to the attention of FSA officials, they were unaware 
that the individual had died in 1993 and acknowledged that FSA provided 
improper payments to the farming operation from 1993 through 2002. 
According to agency officials, they intend to take action against the 
farming operation to recover the improper payments. 

In the third case, FSA provided about $260,000 in farm program payments 
from 1999 through 2006 to a corporation on the basis of the ownership 
interest of an individual who had died in 1993. According to FSA 
records, the farming operation had 14 shareholders, with the deceased 
individual holding a 14-percent interest. We found that another member 
of this farming operation, who had signature authority for the 
operation, updated the farm's operating plan in 2004 but failed to 
notify FSA of the death of this member who we found had resided in a 
metropolitan area several hundred miles from the farm. The farming 
operation therefore continued to receive farm program payments on 
behalf of the deceased individual. FSA was unaware that the individual 
had died in 1993, but said it would investigate and if improper 
payments were made it would take action against the farming operation 
to recover the payments. 

USDA recognizes that its farm programs have management control 
weaknesses, making them vulnerable to significant improper payments. In 
its FY 2006 Performance and Accountability Report to OMB, USDA reported 
that poor management controls led to improper payments to some farmers, 
in part because of incorrect or missing paperwork.[Footnote 10] In 
addition, as part of its reporting of improper payments information, 
USDA identified six FSA programs susceptible to significant risk of 
improper payments with estimated improper payments totaling over $2.8 
billion in fiscal year 2006, as shown in table 3. 

Table 3: USDA Estimates of Improper Payments, Fiscal Year 2006: 

Dollars in millions. 

Program: Direct and Counter-Cyclical Payments Program; 
Estimated improper payments: $424; 
Average percent error rate: 4.96. 

Program: Conservation Reserve Program; 
Estimated improper payments: 64; 
Average percent error rate: 3.53. 

Program: Disaster assistance programs[A]; 
Estimated improper payments: 291; 
Average percent error rate: 12.30. 

Program: Noninsured Assistance Program[B]; 
Estimated improper payments: 25; 
Average percent error rate: 22.94. 

Program: Loan deficiency payments provided under the Marketing 
Assistance Loan Program; 
Estimated improper payments: 443; 
Average percent error rate: 9.25. 

Program: Other benefits provided under the Marketing Assistance Loan 
Program; 
Estimated improper payments: 1,611; 
Average percent error rate: 20.26. 

Program: Total/average; 
Estimated improper payments: $2,858; 
Average percent error rate: 11.17. 

Source: USDA's FY 2006 Performance and Accountability Report. 

Note: USDA's estimates include improper payments made to deceased 
individuals but USDA does not separate these payments from other 
improper payments. 

[A] Disaster assistance payments are direct federal payments to crop 
producers when either planting is prevented or crop yields are 
abnormally low because of adverse weather and related conditions. 

[B] The Noninsured Assistance Program provides financial assistance to 
producers of non-insured crops when low yields, loss of inventory, or 
prevented planting occur due to natural disasters. Assistance is 
limited to crops not eligible for coverage under the federal crop 
insurance program. 

[End of table] 

Complex Farming Operations and a Lack of Management Controls Raise the 
Potential for Improper Payments to Deceased Individuals: 

Farm program payments made to deceased individuals indirectly--that is, 
as members of farming entities--represent a disproportionately high 
share of post-death payments. Specifically, payments to deceased 
individuals through entities accounted for $648 million--or 58 percent 
of the $1.1 billion in payments made to all deceased individuals from 
1999 through 2005. However, payments to individuals through entities 
accounted for $35.6 billion--or 27 percent of the $130 billion in farm 
program payments FSA provided from 1999 through 2005. Similarly, we 
identified 39,834 of the 172,801 deceased individuals as receiving farm 
program payments through entities when we compared FSA's databases with 
the Social Security Administration's Death Master File. 

The complex nature of some types of farming entities, in particular, 
corporations and general partnerships, increases the potential for 
improper payments. For example, a significant portion of farm program 
payments went to deceased individuals who were members of corporations 
and general partnerships. Deceased individuals identified as members of 
corporations and general partnerships received nearly three-quarters of 
the $648 million that went to deceased individuals in all entities. The 
remaining one-quarter of payments went to deceased individuals of other 
types of entities, including estates, joint ventures, limited 
partnerships, and trusts. With regard to the number of deceased 
individuals who received farm program payments through entities, they 
were most often members of corporations and general partnerships. 
Specifically, of the 39,834 deceased individuals who received farm 
program payments through entities, about 57 percent were listed in 
FSA's databases as members of corporations or general partnerships. 
Table 4 shows the number and percent of farm program payments FSA made 
to deceased individuals through entities from 1999 through 2005. 

Table 4: Farm Program Payments Made to Deceased Individuals through 
Entities, Program Years 1999 through 2005: 

Dollars in millions. 

Entity type: Corporations[A]; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 14,197; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 35.6; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: $321.5; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 49.6. 

Entity type: Estates; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 2,262; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 5.7; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: 8.2; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 1.3. 

Entity type: General partnerships; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 8,575; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 21.5; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: 136.7; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 21.1. 

Entity type: Irrevocable trusts; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 4,377; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 11.0; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: 35.7; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 5.5. 

Entity type: Joint ventures; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 2,073; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 5.2; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: 19.4; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 3.0. 

Entity type: Limited partnerships; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 2,391; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 6.0; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: 30.7; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 4.7. 

Entity type: Revocable trusts; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 3,866; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 9.7; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: 28.8; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 4.4. 

Entity type: Other[B]; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 2,093; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 5.3; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: 67.1; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 10.4. 

Total; 
Deceased individuals: Number: 39,834; 
Deceased individuals: Percent: 100.0; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Total: $648.1; 
Payments to deceased individuals: Percent: 100.0. 

Source: GAO's analysis of FSA's data. 

[A] Includes limited liability companies. 

[B] Includes charitable organizations, individuals operating as a small 
business, and individuals receiving payments through more than one 
entity. 

[End of table] 

As we reported in 2004, some farming operations may reorganize to 
overcome payment limits to maximize their program benefits.[Footnote 
11] Large farming operations are often structured as corporations or 
general partnerships with other entities embedded within these 
entities. Deceased individuals are sometimes members of these embedded 
entities. For example, as shown in table 4, 8,575 deceased individuals 
received payments through general partnerships from 1999 through 2005. 
Of these, 687 received farm program payments because they were members 
of one or more entities that were embedded in the general partnership. 
Generally, these partnerships are consistent with the 1987 Act, as 
amended, whereby an individual can qualify for up to three payments by 
being a member of three entities within one general partnership. 
Furthermore, of the 172,801 deceased individuals identified as 
receiving farm program payments, 5,081 received more than one payment 
because (1) they were a member of more than one entity, or (2) they 
received payments as an individual and were a member of an entity. 

According to FSA field officials, complex farming operations, such as 
corporations and general partnerships with embedded entities, make it 
difficult for FSA to prevent making improper payments to deceased 
individuals. In particular, in many large farming operations, one 
individual often holds signature authority for the entire farming 
operation, which may include multiple members or entities. This 
individual may be the only contact FSA has with the operation; 
therefore, FSA cannot always know that each member of the operation is 
represented accurately to FSA by the signing individual for several 
reasons. First, it relies on the farming operation to self-certify that 
the information provided is accurate and that the operation will inform 
FSA of any operating plan changes, which would include the death of an 
operation's member. Such notification would provide USDA with current 
information to determine the eligibility of the entity to receive the 
payments. Second, FSA has no management controls, such as computer 
matching of its payment files with the Social Security Administration's 
Death Master File, to verify that an ongoing farming operation has 
failed to report the death of a member. 

Conclusions: 

FSA has a formidable task--ensuring that billions of dollars in program 
payments are made only to estates and individuals that are eligible to 
receive them. Our review, however, demonstrates that FSA field offices 
do not always conduct the necessary annual determinations to ensure 
that estates are eligible to receive farm program payments. FSA's 
performance of these determinations for estates that have been kept 
open for more than 2 years could serve as an effective deterrent to 
making improper program payments. However, these determinations can 
only be a deterrent if they are consistently and thoroughly conducted. 
As we have found, some FSA field offices have failed to conduct 
eligibility determinations or have not conducted them consistently and 
documented the results of their determinations. 

FSA has relied on farming operations to report the death of a member 
whose ownership interest makes the operation eligible for program 
payments. However, it appears that some individuals who certify program 
eligibility forms for farming operations are either not taking 
seriously their obligation to notify FSA of the death of a member of 
the operation or are deliberately withholding this information to 
maximize their receipt of farm program payments. Our matching of FSA's 
farm payment database with the Social Security Administration's Death 
Master File indicates that FSA's reliance is misplaced, in at least 
some instances. We previously reported that we found examples of 
farming operations where recipients may circumvent the payment limits 
by organizing large farming operations to maximize program payments. 
The complex nature of these entities--such as entities embedded within 
other entities--increases the potential that deceased individuals will 
receive farm program payments because the status of these individuals 
is not easy for FSA to ascertain. Currently, FSA does not have 
effective management controls to verify that an individual receiving 
farm program payments, either directly or indirectly through an entity, 
is still alive. The lack of these controls increases the risk of 
improper payments being made over time. 

The shortcomings we have identified underscore the need for improved 
oversight of federal farm programs. Such oversight can help to ensure 
that program funds are spent as economically, efficiently, and 
effectively as possible, and that they benefit those engaged in farming 
as intended. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To provide reasonable assurance that FSA does not make improper 
payments to estates and deceased individuals, we recommend that the 
Secretary of Agriculture direct the Administrator of the Farm Service 
Agency to: 

* instruct FSA field offices to conduct all annual estate eligibility 
determinations as required; 

* implement management controls, such as matching payment files with 
the Social Security Administration's Death Master File, to verify that 
an individual receiving farm program payments has not died; and: 

* determine if improper program payments have been made to deceased 
individuals or to entities that failed to disclose the death of a 
member, and if so, recover the appropriate amounts. 

In addition, we have referred the cases we identify in this report to 
USDA's Office of Inspector General for further investigation. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided FSA with a draft of this report for review and comment. FSA 
agreed with our recommendations and already has begun to take action to 
implement them. For example, FSA has issued a notice (Notice PL-158, 
May 31, 2007) to its field offices emphasizing the current payment 
eligibility rules, procedures, and review requirements for payments 
with respect to deceased individuals and estates. This directive 
instructs these offices to review the eligibility of all estates that 
have been open for more than 2 years and requested 2007 farm program 
benefits. Furthermore, according to FSA, it is currently working with 
the Social Security Administration to obtain access to the Death Master 
File of deceased individuals. FSA intends to develop a process for 
matching its payment data against the Death Master File on at least an 
annual basis. According to FSA, it will then have a reliable means for 
identifying deceased individuals who may also be payment recipients. In 
addition, once implemented, FSA will no longer have to depend on the 
farming operation to notify the agency of an individual's death. 

Despite its concurrence with our recommendations, FSA did not agree 
with our use of the term "improper payments" in this report. FSA 
suggested that we revise the report to refer to the payments as at most 
"questionable" in view of current eligibility regulations, rather than 
improper. Specifically, the agency stated that the payments we describe 
do not meet the definition of improper payments under IPIA. We 
disagree. We believe three cases we highlight in examples in the report 
do meet the definition of improper payments under IPIA. IPIA defines 
improper payments as any payment that should not have been made or that 
was made in an incorrect amount (including overpayments and 
underpayments) under statutory, contractual, administrative, or other 
legally applicable requirements. This definition would include any 
payment made to an ineligible recipient either directly or through an 
entity. Our examples are consistent with this definition. Furthermore, 
officials in FSA's field offices agreed with our findings and told us 
they intend to recover the payments. For the remaining farm program 
payments identified in the report, we continue to believe that the 
potential exists for improper payments because of the lack of FSA 
management controls and the complexity of some of the farming 
operations involved. Under current circumstances, FSA cannot be assured 
that millions of dollars in farm program payments are going to those 
who met eligibility requirements and thus should have received these 
payments. 

FSA's written comments are presented in appendix II. FSA also provided 
us with suggested technical corrections, which we have incorporated 
into this report, as appropriate. 

As arranged with your office, unless you publicly announce its contents 
earlier, we plan no further distribution of this report until 30 days 
from its issue date. At that time, we will send copies of this report 
to appropriate congressional committees; the Secretary of Agriculture; 
the Director, OMB; and other interested parties. In addition, this 
report will be available at no charge on GAO's Web site at 
http://www.gao.gov. 

If you or your staff have any questions about this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-3841 or shamesl@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. Key contributors to this report are 
listed in appendix V. 

Sincerely yours, 

Signed by: 

Lisa Shames: 
Director, Natural Resources and Environment: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

At the request of the Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on 
Finance, we reviewed the Farm Service Agency's (FSA) implementation of 
payment eligibility provisions to identify improper payments to estates 
and deceased individuals. Specifically, we evaluated the extent to 
which FSA (1) follows its regulations that are intended to provide 
reasonable assurance that farm program payments go only to eligible 
estates and (2) makes improper payments to deceased individuals. 

To determine how well FSA field offices carry out rules that prohibit 
payments to ineligible recipients, we reviewed guidance that FSA field 
offices use to determine farm program payment eligibility, including 
relevant statutes and regulations and agency policy, including the FSA 
Handbook on Payment Limitations, 1-PL (Revision 1). We reviewed 
relevant studies prepared by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's 
(USDA) Office of Inspector General and the Congressional Research 
Service, as well as our own past reports. We also reviewed USDA's FY 
2006 Performance and Accountability Report to understand its assessment 
of internal controls for its farm programs. In addition, we spoke with 
FSA officials in headquarters, state offices, and local field offices 
who are responsible for ensuring that (1) estates are properly reviewed 
for eligibility and (2) payments are not made to deceased individuals. 

We obtained and analyzed FSA's computer databases for information on 
payment recipients from 1999 through 2005. These databases included 
FSA's Producer Payment Reporting System, Commodity Certificate file, 
and Permitted Entity file. The databases contain detailed information 
on payment recipients: Social Security numbers, payment amounts, the 
status of recipients as individuals or members of entities, their 
ownership interest in entities, types of entity, and additional 
organizational details. The databases also contain information on 
payments made under USDA's farm programs, including the Direct and 
Counter-Cyclical Payments Program, Marketing Assistance Loan Program, 
Conservation Reserve Program, and Environmental Quality Incentives 
Program. We also compiled data on farm program benefits provided 
through cooperative marketing associations.[Footnote 12] Because our 
analysis covered the years 1999 through 2005, it also included farm 
payments from programs authorized before the Farm Security and Rural 
Investment Act of 2002, such as production flexibility contract 
payments authorized under the Agriculture Market Transition Act and 
market loss assistance payments and crop disaster assistance payments 
authorized under various ad hoc legislation. Appendix III provides a 
list of USDA farm programs we reviewed. 

To evaluate FSA's application of regulations and guidance to assess the 
overall effectiveness of its review process for deciding whether 
estates are eligible to receive farm program payments, we reviewed a 
nonrandom sample of estate eligibility determinations. To identify 
estates for our review, we analyzed FSA's databases. The data showed 
that 2,841 estates had received payments for more than 2 years between 
1999 and 2005, thus requiring FSA to conduct a determination of 
eligibility. Of these, we examined 181 estates in 26 states and 142 
counties. These estates included the 162 (i.e., 162 of 2,841) that 
received over $100,000 in farm program payments during this period. We 
also selected the 16 estates (i.e., 16 of 2,841) that (1) had received 
between $50,000 and $100,000 in farm program payments during this 
period and (2) had at least one member receiving payments through three 
other entities, which could indicate circumvention of the three-entity 
rule. Lastly, we selected the three estates (i.e., 3 of 2,841) that had 
at least one member receiving payments through seven or more other 
entities. 

For each estate selected, we reviewed case file documents to verify the 
basis for FSA field offices' decisions to grant eligibility. 
Specifically, we obtained and reviewed files from FSA field offices 
that ideally would have included the following information to 
facilitate FSA's determinations: letters testamentary from a probate 
court, minutes of the FSA county committee meeting that approved 
eligibility, explanation letters or documentation for the reason the 
estate remained active beyond 2 years, farm operating plans, and 
payment history. States and counties vary widely in the amount and type 
of documentation they require for probated estates. Consequently, we 
could not easily determine whether improper payments were made to 
estates. Furthermore, even in cases in which FSA had not done the 
required annual determinations, or when relevant documentation was 
missing or incomplete in the estate file, we could not determine 
whether improper payments were made without examining each case in 
depth. 

To evaluate the extent to which FSA makes improper payments to deceased 
individuals, we compared recipients of farm program payments in FSA's 
computer databases with individuals whose Social Security numbers were 
listed in the Social Security Administration's Death Master File, to 
identify post-death program payments for individuals who were deceased. 
The Death Master File contains information such as the name and Social 
Security numbers of deceased individuals in the United States. We 
assessed the reliability of FSA's data by (1) performing electronic 
testing of required data elements, (2) reviewing existing information 
about the data and the system that produced them, and (3) interviewing 
agency officials knowledgeable about the data. We determined that the 
data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of our review. 
Although we did not assess the reliability of the Social Security 
Administration's Death Master File, it is the most comprehensive list 
of death information available in the federal government and is 
generally used by other government agencies and researchers. 

Using FSA's databases, we identified the 2.9 million individuals who 
received payments, either directly or indirectly through an entity, 
from 1999 through 2005. Payments were attributed to members of an 
entity by apportioning the payments according to each member's 
percentage share of that entity.[Footnote 13] Using these Social 
Security numbers, we then compared these individuals with individuals 
listed in the Social Security Administration's Death Master File to 
determine the extent to which deceased individuals may have received 
improper payments. The data match showed the number and dollar amount 
of payments FSA provided to deceased individuals from 1999 through 
2005. To gain an understanding of circumstances behind seemingly 
improper payments, we obtained relevant documents from FSA, including 
farm operating plans and acreage reports, for selected cases. 

We conducted our review between June 2006 and May 2007 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

Note: GAO comments supplementing those in the report text appear at the 
end of this appendix. 

USDA: 
United States Department of Agriculture: 
Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services: 
Farm Service Agency: 
Operations Review and Analysis Staff: 
Audits, Investigations and State and county: 
Review Branch: 
1400 Independence Ave, SW: 
STOP 0540: 
Washington, DC 20250-0501: 

To: Lisa Shames: 
Director: 
Natural Resources and Environment: 
General Accountability Office: 

From: Teresa C. Lasseter: 
Administrator: 

June 14, 2007: 

Subject: Responding to U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) 
Draft Report: GAO-07-818, Job Code 360718, "Federal Farm Programs: USDA 
Needs to Strengthen Controls to Prevent Improper Payments to Estates 
and Deceased Individuals" 

The following are general comments in response to the draft report. 

We would note that the written notification of assignment to the Farm 
Service Agency (FSA), dated May 25, 2006, did not include any reference 
or discussion in regard to the Improper Payments Information Act of 
2006 (IPIA). The notification listed the main objective of GAO is to 
provide information on the Department of Agriculture's (USDA) 
implementation of the Farm Program Payment Integrity Act of 1987. More 
specifically, the focus was to be on the eligibility of individual 
decedents' estates and as members of permitted entities to receive 
program payments. However, the title of the subject report now refers 
directly to improper payment to estates and deceased individuals. 

During the exit conference, FSA requested that GAO at least include an 
explanation that the term `improper payment' as used in this report 
does not carry the same meaning as under IPIA. The basis for this 
request was that GAO made no findings during this review that any 
payments disbursed to program participants included in the audit 
samplings met the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) definition of 
"improper payment." Furthermore, no findings were made that FSA issued 
significant improper payments as defined by OMB. The draft report 
contains no such explanation or distinction as previously assured by 
GAO. Therefore, we maintain that it should be made clear to the reader 
that certain payments found to be made to deceased individuals and 
estates during the years 1999 through 2005 be considered at most 
`questionable' in view of current payment eligibility regulations, 
rather than under the terms of IPIA. 

The Food Security Act of 1985, as amended, implemented requirements for 
payment eligibility; imposed limitations on the amount of program 
payments that an individual or entity could receive; and placed a 
restriction on the number of entities through which an individual may 
receive program payments and benefits under specific programs. Program 
payments were to be limited by "person" defined as an individual, an 
entity, or in some situations, the combination of an individual and 
entity. Also for payment eligibility, the individual or entity was 
required to be determined "actively engaged in farming" to receive 
program payments and benefits. Rules were promulgated and applied in 
response to these statutory requirements. 

It was recognized that in the administration of programs, participants 
die and estates are formed. Considerations were made for the 
eligibility of such deceased individuals and for the estate that may be 
established for the deceased individual. Likewise for an estate that 
was established, the payment eligibility standards and limitations for 
entities were then applicable. 

An individual as a "person" can in his or her own name receive program 
payments of an amount less than or equal to the limitation afforded one 
"person." Furthermore, that same individual can also receive benefits 
through an interest held in an entity. This entity, as determined a 
separate "person," can also receive program payments of an amount less 
than or equal to the limitation afforded one "person." There are 
instances when two individuals or an individual and an entity, are 
considered combined as one "person" for payment limitation purposes. 
However, under the rules for estates, an heir to an estate will not be 
combined with the estate unless that individual and the deceased would 
have been combined as one "person." Accordingly, even though an 
individual may be the sole heir of an estate, the individual is not 
combined as one "person" with the estate unless the individual would 
have been combined as one "person" with the individual who is now 
deceased. Therefore, it may be considered advantageous for an estate to 
be kept open if an heir has already reached the payment limitation. 
This allows heirs to receive program payments that they otherwise would 
not be eligible for if the estate was settled because the payment 
limitation was reached. 

Regulations at 7 CFR Part 1400 provide that if a deceased individual's 
estate remains open after two program years from the date of the 
program year in which the individual died, FSA should determine, on a 
case-by-case basis, whether the estate is being kept open for the 
primary purpose of obtaining program payments. Otherwise, after 2 years 
the estate is not considered eligible for program payments and benefits 
under programs subject to the payment limitation provisions (7 CFR § 
1400.206(b)). 

The regulation also provides that if an individual dies before a 
determination of eligibility is made, information must be provided on 
behalf of the estate that verifies the individual did make a conscious 
effort and would have been determined actively engaged in farming if 
not for the individual's death. If the individual dies after all 
eligibility determinations were made, the determining authority shall 
allow that determination to be in effect for the individual's estate 
for that program year. The following year, however, the individual's 
estate must meet all necessary requirements to be determined actively 
engaged in farming (7 CFR § 1400.2 10). 

To implement these requirements, county FSA committees (COCs) are 
instructed to annually review all estates that requested program 
benefits and that were in existence more than two program years after 
the program year in which the individual died. COCs are to determine 
that the estate has proven to be active and that the estate is being 
kept open for reasons other than for obtaining program benefits. For 
deceased individuals and estates, all requirements must be met to be 
determined actively engaged in farming and eligible for program 
benefits for the year requested. The district directors are also 
required to review and concur with these findings and determinations 
(Handbook 1-PL (Rev. 1), paragraph 333; effective since May 8, 1992). 

As outlined in the notification of assignment, GAO's objectives were to 
determine the extent to which individual decedents' estates receive 
farm program benefits beyond the 2 years allowed by the payment 
eligibility rules and the extent that estates, as members of entities, 
receive farm program benefits beyond the 2 years allowed. GAO 
additionally reviewed the extent to which program payments were issued 
to deceased individuals. 

GAO selected a non-random sample of estates that had been in existence 
for more than two program years and that received program payments for 
the years 1999 through 2005. This sampling process relied on relatively 
high dollar amounts of program payments ($50,000 to $100,000) as the 
basis for selection. The estates in this judgmental sample were 
reviewed for compliance with applicable payment eligibility and payment 
limitation requirements. GAO found that 21 percent had eligibility 
reviews completed every year as required; 38 percent had been reviewed 
at least once between the years 1999 through 2005; and over 40 percent 
were not reviewed for the years 1999 through 2005. 

Other findings included that over 12 percent of the estates had been 
receiving payments for more than 10 years. GAO found that one estate 
had received over $700,000 in program benefits from 1999 through 2005 
without any FSA review. No mention was made whether this entity was 
still an open estate or if the entity was misnamed or improperly coded 
in the payment system. The information available in the report was 
insufficient for FSA to conduct further research on this specific case. 
Nonetheless, estates are considered legitimate entities and if all 
requirements are met, considered eligible for program benefits beyond 
the two-year time period from the date of establishment. Since there 
are many legitimate reasons for estates to remain open for extended 
periods of time, the fact that payments are made for multiple years to 
an estate does not constitute fraud or program abuse in and of itself. 

The level of documentation used to support the determinations made by 
COCs that an estate was not kept open for the purpose of obtaining 
program payments was also questioned. Some COCs did a more 
comprehensive review than others. This report mentions weaknesses in 
FSA's implementation of the 1987 amendments in the failure to 
systematically review estates as required for payment eligibility. 
However, GAO did not find any instance in this judgmental sample of an 
estate being kept open for the purpose of obtaining program benefits. 
Furthermore, GAO made no findings of improper payments to estates 
included in this audit sampling. 

FSA issued over $130 billion in farm program payments and benefits for 
the years 1999 through 2005. GAO found that during this period of time, 
FSA issued farm program payments to over 172,000 deceased individuals, 
either as individuals or as members of an entity. The amount disbursed 
to such individuals was $1.1 billion (8/10 of one percent of total 
payments made) which included all commodity, price support, 
conservation, disaster and livestock assistance, loan deficiency, 
tobacco, wool, peanuts, milk, wildlife habitat enhancement cost-share, 
and any other disbursements of record in the producer payment history 
file. GAO determined that 40 percent of the $1.1 billion went to 
individuals deceased for 3 or more years. 

Figure 1 of the draft report illustrated the relationship that GAO 
found between the amount of farm program payments issued to deceased 
individuals (in millions of dollars) to the number of years payments 
were provided after the date of death. What is not mentioned is that 60 
percent of the $1.1 billion issued in all farm program payments for the 
years 1999 through 2005, and not just the payments subject to the rule 
at 7 CFR Part 1400, were issued less than 3 years after the date of 
death. GAO fails to include that under the Direct and Counter-Cyclical 
Payment Program (DCP), counter-cyclical payments may be issued up to 3 
years after the applicable program year. The same taxpayer 
identification number must be used for the entire program payment 
period, which may be up to 3 years. 

Crop loss and livestock disaster assistance programs disburse benefits 
on an after-the-fact basis. GAO provided information in Table 3 that 
showed the highest error rate for "improper payments" was under the 
Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program. Under these types of 
programs, it is the individual that suffered the crop or livestock loss 
necessary for qualification. This individual may not have been deceased 
at the time of application or when the disaster losses occurred. 
However, at the date of payment disbursement, the individual may have 
since died. The disaster assistance must be issued under the taxpayer 
identification number of the now deceased individual as the surviving 
spouse and heirs are not otherwise eligible for such program benefits 
even though the check might be payable to the estate or spouse under 
our rules in 7 CFR Part 707. 

Aside from estate matters GAO emphasized that 58 percent of $1.1 
billion of the reported farm program payments "made" with respect to 
the affairs of deceased individuals in the 1999-2005 period were not 
made to them at all or to their estates but rather to entities in which 
they had an interest in their lifetimes. GAO noted that the complex 
nature of some types of farming entities increases the likelihood of 
improper payments. This complex nature of many large farming operations 
makes it more difficult for FSA to ensure that improper payments are 
not made. Another factor noted is the reliance on the farming 
operations to self-certify that the information provided is accurate, 
and that the operation will timely inform FSA of any operational 
changes, including the death of an interest holder. 

The current rule provides for the application of payment eligibility 
directly to the individual and to the entity which are program 
participants. The same rule provides for the application and control of 
the limitations on program payments by "person" as defined by the 1985 
Act. The current rule does not provide or require the application of 
the payment eligibility and limitation standards by attribution, either 
directly or indirectly to individuals or entities. GAO made no findings 
that FSA made improper payments to any entities that were otherwise 
eligible even though a change of stockholders may have occurred within 
the entity due to death. 

The following are comments on the recommendations for executive 
actions. 

1) Instruct the FSA field offices to conduct all annual estate 
eligibility determinations as required. 

FSA issued Notice PL-158 on May 31, 2007, which emphasized the current 
payment eligibility rules, procedures, and review requirements for 
payments with respect to deceased individuals and estates. This 
directive instructs all field offices to review all estates in 
existence more than 2 years and have requested 2007 program benefits 
subject to the rule at 7 CFR Part 1400. The review is to be completed 
and eligibility updated as necessary by August 31, 2007. This is prior 
to the issuance of the final 2007 DCP direct payments and the issuance 
of annual rental payments under the Conservation Reserve Program. 

2) Implement management controls, such as matching payment files with 
the Social Security Administration's Death Master File, to verify that 
an individual receiving farm program payments is not dead. 

Efforts are currently underway with representatives of FSA and the 
Social Security Administration for access to the Death Master File of 
deceased individuals. The purpose is the development of a process for 
matching of the respective Agency's data on at least an annual basis. 
FSA will then have the ability and a reliable means by which to 
identity deceased individuals that may also be payment recipients. Once 
implemented, FSA will no longer have to depend on the farming operation 
to notify the Agency of an individual's death. 

3) Determine if improper payments have been made to deceased 
individuals or to entities that failed to disclose the death of a 
member, and if so, recover the appropriate amounts. 

The review required by Notice PL-158 will identify any truly improper 
payments. FSA has in place regulations and procedures to initiate 
collection of any program payments and benefits found to be issued in 
error, or to program participants that have been determined ineligible 
for such payments and benefits. 

GAO's Comments: 

1. We believe the payments we highlight in three examples in the report 
meet the definition of improper payments under IPIA. IPIA defines 
improper payments as any payment that should not have been made or that 
was made in an incorrect amount (including overpayments and 
underpayments) under statutory, contractual, administrative, or other 
legally applicable requirements. This definition would include any 
payment made to an ineligible recipient either directly or through an 
entity. Our examples are consistent with this definition. Furthermore, 
officials in FSA's field offices agreed with our findings and told us 
they intend to recover the payments. For the remaining farm program 
payments identified in the report, we continue to believe that the 
potential exists for improper payments because of the lack of FSA 
management controls and the complexity of some of the farming 
operations involved. Under current circumstances, FSA cannot be assured 
that millions of dollars in farm program payments are going to those 
who met eligibility requirements and thus should have received these 
payments. 

2. For each of the three examples discussed in the report, we verified 
the accuracy of information in FSA's payment system and discussed the 
estate with the FSA field office where the estate was located. Because 
the field offices have this information, we do not understand why FSA 
does not believe the report provided sufficient information to 
investigate these cases further. 

3. We would expect FSA field offices to have appropriate documents to 
verify acceptable reasons for keeping the estate open. These files 
could have included the following information to facilitate FSA's 
determinations: letters testamentary from a probate court, minutes of 
the FSA county committee meeting that approved eligibility, explanation 
letters or documentation for the reason the estate remained active 
beyond 2 years, and farm operating plans. However, when annual 
determinations were not done or relevant documentation was missing or 
incomplete in the files, we could not determine with certainty whether 
improper payments were made to estates. As we discuss on page 4 of this 
report, the wide variation in state and county documentation required 
for probated estates made it difficult for us to make eligibility 
determinations. We continue to believe that the failure of FSA's field 
offices to conduct annual determinations of eligibility increases the 
risk of improper payments being made over time. 

4. FSA implies that because the $1.1 billion in farm program payments 
paid to deceased individuals during 1999 through 2005 amounts to only 
8/10 of 1 percent of the total payments made during this period, the 
amount is negligible. We disagree--a billion dollars is not a 
negligible sum. In addition, this amount represents only payments made 
to deceased individuals during this specific period; it does not 
capture payments made to deceased individuals before and after this 
period. FSA is obligated to ensure that program funds are spent as 
economically, efficiently, and effectively as possible. The nation's 
current deficit and growing long-term fiscal challenges reinforce the 
importance of this obligation. Implementing management controls, such 
as matching payment files with the Social Security Administration's 
Death Master File, to verify that an individual receiving farm program 
payments has not died is a simple, cost-effective means to achieve this 
end. 

5. FSA is correct that counter-cyclical payments may be made for up to 
3 years after an individual has died. However, according to our 
analysis, only $46.5 million (4.2 percent) of the $1.1 billion in 
payments made to deceased individuals from 1999 through 2005 were 
counter-cyclical payments made for the same program year as the year in 
which the individual died. Furthermore, a farming operation is subject 
to forfeiture of payments, including counter-cyclical payments, if it 
has not notified FSA of a change in the farming operation, such as the 
death of an individual who receives payments as a member of that 
operation. Many deceased individuals who received counter-cyclical 
payments during this period also received payments under other programs 
for which FSA should have been notified of the change in the farming 
operation. However, the fact that an individual was identified as 
deceased in our computer matching indicates FSA was not informed that a 
change in the farm operation had occurred, suggesting that the farming 
operation was not eligible to receive any of the payments, including 
the counter-cyclical payments. 

6. As noted in the report, the source for information in table 3 (p. 
17) is USDA's FY 2006 Performance and Accountability Report. The 
improper payments and the percent error rate for each program in table 
3 are USDA's estimates. We acknowledge that improper payments made 
under the Noninsured Assistance Program are not exclusively the result 
of payments made to deceased individuals. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: U.S. Department of Agriculture Farm Program Payments, 
Fiscal Years 1999 through 2005: 

[See PDF for Table, corruption in document, table did not compute 
properly] 

Source: GAO's analysis of FSA's and Natural Resources Conservation 
Service's data. 

Notes: For commodity certificate exchange gains and payments made under 
the Marketing Assistance Loan Program through cooperative marketing 
associations, we used program year data. Totals may not add due to 
rounding. Negative payments represent receivables due to over- 
disbursements and other payment anomalies in a prior year. 

[A] Includes the American Indian Livestock Assistance Program. 

[B] Includes cotton user marketing certificate gains. 

[C] Includes the Apple & Potato Quality Loss Program, Sugar Beet 
Disaster Program, Quality Loss Program, Crop Loss Disaster Assistance 
Program, Florida Nursery Losses Program, Florida Hurricane Charley 
Disaster Program, Disaster Reserve Flood Compensation Program, Florida 
Hurricane Nursery Disaster Program, Florida Hurricane Vegetable 
Disaster Program, Multi-Year Crop Loss Disaster Assistance Program, 
North Carolina Crop Hurricane Damage Program, Nursery Losses In Florida 
Program, and Single Year Crop Loss Disaster Assistance Program, as well 
as Disaster Supplemental Appropriation payments, Crop Disaster North 
Carolina payments, Crop Disaster Virginia payments, and 1999 Citrus 
Losses In California. 

[D] Includes the Dairy Indemnity Program, Dairy Options Pilot Program, 
and Dairy Production Disaster Assistance Program. 

[E] Includes the Interim Environmental Quality Incentives Program 
(EQIP) For Colorado River Salinity Control Program, Interim EQIP For 
Great Plains Conservation Program, as well as Automated Conservation 
Program Environmental Long Term payments, and Interim EQIP Annual 
Agreement for Agricultural Conservation Program payments. 

[F] Includes the Ewe Lamb Replacement and Retention Program. 

[G] Includes the Livestock Assistance Program, Livestock Indemnity 
Program, Avian Influenza Indemnity Program, Cattle Feed Program, 
Pasture Flood Compensation Program, and Pasture Recovery Program. 

[H] Includes "loan deficiency payment-like" grazing payments for wheat, 
barley, oats, and triticale. 

[I] Includes supplemental appropriations for the Noninsured Assistance 
Program. 

[J] Includes supplemental appropriations for the Oilseed Payment 
Program. 

[K] Includes the Sugar Payment-In-Kind Diversion Program. 

[L] Includes the Tobacco Loss Assistance Program and the Supplement 
Tobacco Loss Assistance Program. 

[M] Includes the Yakima Basin Water Program, Flood Compensation Program 
for Harney County Oregon, Fresh Market Peaches Program, Idaho Oust 
Program, Livestock Compensation Program-Grants For Catfish Producers, 
Limited California Cooperative Insolvency Program, New Mexico 
Tebuthiuron Application Losses Program, New York Onion Producers 
Program, Potato Diversion Program, Poultry Enteritis Mortality Syndrome 
Program, Seed Corn Purchase Containing CRY9C Protein Program, Specialty 
Crops-Base State Grants Program, Specialty Crops-Value Of Production 
Program, and State Commodity Assistance Program, as well as Consent 
Decree payments and Interest Penalty payments. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: U.S. Department of Agriculture Estate Eligibility Reviews, 
by State, Program Years 1999 through 2005: 

Table 5 shows the variation by state in FSA's conduct of eligibility 
determinations from 1999 through 2005 for the 181 estates in our 
sample. Not all states are represented because we chose estates based 
on criteria other than location. Our sample of 181 estates included the 
162 that received over $100,000 in farm program payments during this 
period. We also selected the 16 estates that (1) received between 
$50,000 and $100,000 in farm program payments during this period and 
(2) had at least one member receiving payments through three other 
entities, which could indicate circumvention of the three-entity 
rule.[Footnote 14] In addition, we selected the three estates that had 
at least one member receiving payments through seven or more other 
entities. 

Table 5: Variation in Reviews Conducted by FSA, by State, Program Years 
1999 through 2005: 

State: Alabama; 
Number of estates requiring review: 9; 
Number of estates reviewed: 2; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 22.2. 

State: Arizona; 
Number of estates requiring review: 1; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: Arkansas; 
Number of estates requiring review: 12; 
Number of estates reviewed: 8; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 66.7. 

State: California; 
Number of estates requiring review: 1; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: Colorado; 
Number of estates requiring review: 2; 
Number of estates reviewed: 2; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 100.0. 

State: Georgia; 
Number of estates requiring review: 16; 
Number of estates reviewed: 5; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 31.3. 

State: Illinois; 
Number of estates requiring review: 20; 
Number of estates reviewed: 13; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 65.0. 

State: Iowa; 
Number of estates requiring review: 1; 
Number of estates reviewed: 1; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 100.0. 

State: Indiana; 
Number of estates requiring review: 4; 
Number of estates reviewed: 2; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 50.0. 

State: Kansas; 
Number of estates requiring review: 13; 
Number of estates reviewed: 8; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 61.5. 

State: Kentucky; 
Number of estates requiring review: 2; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: Louisiana; 
Number of estates requiring review: 3; 
Number of estates reviewed: 1; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 33.3. 

State: Minnesota; 
Number of estates requiring review: 1; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: Mississippi; 
Number of estates requiring review: 3; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: Missouri; 
Number of estates requiring review: 1; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: Montana; 
Number of estates requiring review: 4; 
Number of estates reviewed: 1; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 25.0. 

State: North Carolina; 
Number of estates requiring review: 1; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: North Dakota; 
Number of estates requiring review: 4; 
Number of estates reviewed: 3; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 75.0. 

State: Nebraska; 
Number of estates requiring review: 4; 
Number of estates reviewed: 1; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 25.0. 

State: New Mexico; 
Number of estates requiring review: 1; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: Oklahoma; 
Number of estates requiring review: 2; 
Number of estates reviewed: 2; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 100.0. 

State: Oregon; 
Number of estates requiring review: 2; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: South Carolina; 
Number of estates requiring review: 1; 
Number of estates reviewed: 0; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 0. 

State: South Dakota; 
Number of estates requiring review: 2; 
Number of estates reviewed: 1; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 50.0. 

State: Texas; 
Number of estates requiring review: 63; 
Number of estates reviewed: 55; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 87.3. 

State: Washington; 
Number of estates requiring review: 8; 
Number of estates reviewed: 3; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 37.5. 

State: Total; 
Number of estates requiring review: 181; 
Number of estates reviewed: 108; 
Percent of estates reviewed: 59.7. 

Source: GAO's analysis of FSA's data. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Lisa Shames (202) 512-3841 or Shamesl@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, James R. Jones, Jr., 
Assistant Director; Hamid E. Ali; Kevin S. Bray; Thomas M. Cook; 
Stephanie K. Fain; Ronald E. Maxon, Jr; Jennifer R. Popovic; and Carol 
Herrnstadt Shulman made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Improper Payments: Agencies' Efforts to Address Improper Payment and 
Recovery Auditing Requirements Continue. GAO-07-635T. Washington, D.C.: 
March 29, 2007. 

Improper Payments: Incomplete Reporting under the Improper Payments 
Information Act Masks the Extent of the Problem. GAO-07-254T. 
Washington, D.C.: December 5, 2006. 

Improper Payments: Agencies' Fiscal Year 2005 Reporting under the 
Improper Payments Information Act Remains Incomplete. GAO-07-92. 
Washington, D.C.: November 14, 2006. 

Financial Management: Challenges Continue in Meeting Requirements of 
the Improper Payments Information Act. GAO-06-581T. Washington, D.C.: 
April 5, 2006. 

Financial Management: Challenges Remain in Meeting Requirements of the 
Improper Payments Information Act. GAO-06-482T. Washington, D.C.: March 
9, 2006. 

Financial Management: Challenges in Meeting Governmentwide Improper 
Payment Requirements. GAO-05-907T. Washington, D.C.: July 20, 2005. 

Financial Management: Challenges in Meeting Requirements of the 
Improper Payments Information Act. GAO-05-605T. Washington, D.C.: July 
12, 2005. 

Financial Management: Challenges in Meeting Requirements of the 
Improper Payments Information Act. GAO-05-417. Washington, D.C.: March 
31, 2005. 

Farm Program Payments: USDA Should Correct Weaknesses in Regulations 
and Oversight to Better Ensure Recipients Do Not Circumvent Payment 
Limitations. GAO-04-861T. Washington, D.C.: June 16, 2004. 

Farm Program Payments: USDA Needs to Strengthen Regulations and 
Oversight to Better Ensure Recipients Do Not Circumvent Payment 
Limitations. GAO-04-407. Washington, D.C.: April 30, 2004. 

Strategies to Manage Improper Payments: Learning From Public and 
Private Sector Organizations. GAO-02-69G. Washington, D.C.: October 1, 
2001. 

Farm Programs: Changes to the Marketing Assistance Loan Program Have 
Had Little Impact on Payments. GAO-01-964. Washington, D.C.: September 
28, 2001. 

Farm Programs: Information on Recipients of Federal Payments. GAO-01- 
606. Washington, D.C.: June 15, 2001. 

Financial Management: Billions in Improper Payments Continue to Require 
Attention. GAO-01-44. Washington, D.C.: October 27, 2000. 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] Under this "three-entity rule," a person--an individual or entity-
-can receive program payments through no more than three entities in 
which the person holds a substantial beneficial interest. A person can 
receive payments (1) as an individual and as a member of no more than 
two entities or (2) through three entities and not as an individual. 
FSA defines a substantial beneficial interest as 10 percent or more. 

[2] GAO, Farm Program Payments: USDA Needs to Strengthen Regulations 
and Oversight to Better Ensure Recipients Do Not Circumvent Payment 
Limitations, GAO-04-407 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 30, 2004). 

[3] GAO, Suggested Areas for Oversight for the 110th Congress, GAO-07-
235R (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 17, 2006). 

[4] Alternatively, the estate could qualify as actively engaged in 
farming as a landowner if the estate receives rent or income for the 
use of the land based on the land's production or the farming 
operation's operating results. 

[5] FSA county committees are made up of three to five farmers, elected 
by other farmers, to oversee the local operation of FSA programs, 
including eligibility determinations. 

[6] Pub. L. No. 107-300, 116 Stat. 2350 (2002). 

[7] Pub. L. No. 107-171, 116 Stat. 134. 

[8] GAO, Improper Payments: Agencies' Fiscal Year 2005 Reporting under 
the Improper Payments Information Act Remains Incomplete, GAO-07-92 
(Washington, D.C.: Nov. 14, 2006). 

[9] In addition, before the period of our review the operation received 
farm program payments on behalf of the deceased individual from 1995 
through 1998. 

[10] See U.S. Department of Agriculture, FY 2006 Performance and 
Accountability Report (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 15, 2006). 

[11] GAO-04-407. 

[12] USDA provides benefits under the Marketing Assistance Loan Program 
through cooperative marketing associations, an alternative delivery 
system. Cooperative marketing associations obtain benefits on behalf of 
their members who deliver a commodity to the cooperative for marketing 
on a "pool" basis. Benefits, as well as marketing proceeds, are then 
allocated to members according to their share of the commodity in the 
pool. 7 C.F.R. pt. 1425. 

[13] Because cooperative marketing associations, loan servicing agents, 
and designated marketing associations only began reporting program 
benefits provided to their members to USDA in 2007, we were unable to 
attribute these benefits to individuals. 

[14] Under the "three-entity rule," a person--an individual or entity-
-can receive program payments through no more than three entities in 
which the person holds a substantial beneficial interest. A person can 
receive payments (1) as an individual and as a member of no more than 
two entities or (2) through three entities and not as an individual. 
FSA defines a substantial beneficial interest as 10 percent or more. 

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