Operating efficiently and effectively

The EPA's Fiscal
Years 2021 and 2020
(Restated) Financial
Statements for the Pesticide
Registration Fund

Report No. 22-F-0060

September 26, 2022


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Report Contributors	Elizabeth Brinson

Amir Eskarous
Robert Hairston
Tanishia Heilig
Damon Jackson
Sheree James
Ethel Lowery

Demetrios Papakonstantinou
Kevin Ross
Lynda Taylor
Philip Weihrouch

Abbreviations

EPA
PRIA
OIG
U.S.C.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Pesticide Registration Improvement Act
Office of Inspector General
United States Code

Cover Image

A tractor sprays pesticides in a field. (EPA photo)

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Office of Inspector General

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

At a Glance

22-F-0060
September 26, 2022

Why We Did This Audit

The Pesticide Registration
Improvement Act requires that
the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency Office of
Inspector General perform an
annual audit of the financial
statements for the Pesticide
Registration Fund. To expedite
the registration of certain
pesticides, the Act requires the
EPA to assess and collect
pesticide registration fees.

The EPA deposits the fees into
the Pesticide Registration Fund.
The Agency's Office of the Chief
Financial Officer is required to
prepare financial statements that
present financial information
about the fund. The Act also
requires the EPA to establish
time frames for its review and
decision on applications for
pesticide registrations, known as
decision time review periods.
The Act requires that the OIG
conduct an annual audit of the
Pesticide Registration Fund
financial statements, to include
an analysis of the fees collected
and the Agency's compliance
with the decision time review
periods.

The EPA's Fiscal Years 2021 and 2020
(Restated) Financial Statements for the
Pesticide Registration Fund

The EPA Receives an Unmodified Opinion for Fiscal Years 2021
and 2020 (Restated)

We rendered an unmodified opinion on the EPA's
fiscal years 2021 and 2020 (restated) Pesticide
Registration Fund, or PRIA Fund, financial
statements, meaning that the statements were fairly
presented and free of material misstatement.

We found the fund's
financial statements
to be fairly presented
and free of material
misstatement.

Compliance with Applicable Laws, Regulations, Contracts, and
Grant Agreements

We did not identify any noncompliance that would result in a material
misstatement to the audited financial statements. In addition, the Agency was in
compliance with the statutory decision time review periods.

The Agency had no comments in response to the draft report. As a result of our
findings, we make no recommendations.

This audit supports an EPA
mission-related effort:

•	Operating efficiently and
effectively.

This audit addresses a top EPA
management challenge:

•	Managing infrastructure funding
and business operations.

Address inquiries to our public
affairs office at (202) 566-2391 or
OIG WEBCOMMENTS@epa.gov.

List of OIG reports.


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UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460

OFFICE OF
INSPECTOR GENERAL

September 26, 2022

MEMORANDUM

SUBJECT: The EPA's Fiscal Years 2021 and 2020 (Restated) Financial Statements for the Pesticide
Registration Fund
Report No. 22-F-0060

FROM: Damon Jackson, Director Qqjkqh /!/( (Jao£son
Financial Directorate
Office of Audit

TO:	Faisal Amin, Chief Financial Officer

This is our report on the subject audit conducted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Office of
Inspector General. The project number for this audit was QA-FY22-0066. This report describes the OIG's
findings. Final determinations on matters in this report will be made by EPA managers in accordance with
established audit resolution procedures.

The Office of the Chief Financial Officer has primary responsibility for the issues discussed in the report.

You are not required to respond to this report because this report contains no recommendations. If you
submit a response, however, it will be posted on the OIG's website, along with our memorandum
commenting on your response. Your response should be provided as an Adobe PDF file that complies
with the accessibility requirements of Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended. The
final response should not contain data that you do not want to be released to the public; if your response
contains such data, you should identify the data for redaction or removal along with corresponding
justification.

Michal liana Freedhoff, Assistant Administrator
Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention

We will post this report to our website at www.epa.gov/oig.


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The EPA's Fiscal Years 2021 and 2020
(Restated) Financial Statements for the
Pesticide Registration Fund

22-F-0060

	Table of Contents	

Inspector General's Report on the EPA's Fiscal
Years 2021 and 2020 (Restated) Financial Statements
for the Pesticide Registration Fund

Report on the Financial Statements	1

Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting	2

Report on Compliance with Laws, Regulations, Contracts, and Grant Agreements	3

Other Governmental Reporting Requirements	3

Management's Discussion and Analysis	4

Prior Audit Coverage	4

Agency Comments	4

Appendixes

A Fiscal Years 2021 and 2020 (Restated) Pesticide Registration Fund Financial Statements	5

B Distribution	28


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Inspector General's Report on the EPA's Fiscal
Years 2021 and 2020 (Restated) Financial Statements
	for the Pesticide Registration Fund	

The Administrator

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Report on the Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying financial statements of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's
Pesticide Registration Fund, also known as the Pesticide Registration Improvement Act, or PRIA, Fund.
These statements comprise the balance sheets as of September 30, 2021, and September 30, 2020
(restated); the related statements of net cost and changes in net position; the statement of budgetary
resources for the years then ended; and the related notes to the financial statements.

Management's Responsibility for the Financial Statements

Management is responsible for the preparation and fair presentation of these financial statements in
accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America.1 This includes
the design, implementation, and maintenance of internal control relevant to the preparation and fair
presentation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or
error.

Auditor's Responsibility

Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audit. We
conducted our audit in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of
America; the standards applicable to financial statements contained in Government Auditing Standards,
issued by the comptroller general of the United States of America; and Office of Management and
Budget Bulletin 21-04, Audit Requirements for Federal Financial Statements. These standards require
that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free from material misstatement.

An audit involves performing procedures to obtain audit evidence about the amounts and disclosures in
the financial statements. The procedures selected depend on the auditor's judgment, including the
assessment of the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether due to fraud or
error. In making those risk assessments, the auditor considers internal control relevant to the entity's
preparation and fair presentation of the financial statements in order to design audit procedures that
are appropriate in the circumstances. An audit also includes evaluating the appropriateness of
accounting policies used and the reasonableness of significant accounting estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements.

1 Management means the EPA.
22-F-0060

1


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We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for
our audit opinion.

Opinion

In our opinion, the financial statements and accompanying notes present fairly, in all material respects,
the assets, liabilities, net position, net cost, changes in net position, and budgetary resources of the PRIA
Fund as of and for the years ended September 30, 2021, and 2020, in accordance with accounting
principles generally accepted in the United States of America.

Emphasis of Matter-Restatement of Fiscal Year 2020

As described in Note 13 to the financial statements, the EPA restated its fiscal year 2020 PRIA Fund
financial statements. During fiscal year 2021, the EPA determined that "Transfers In/Out" was materially
misstated in fiscal year 2020 as the line should have no balance (netting to zero). The restatement
impacted the following line items on the financial statements:

•	Statement of Net Cost: earned revenue - statement of net cost and net cost of operations -
statement of net cost.

•	Statement of Changes in Net Position: Transfers In/Out - statement of changes in net position.
Our opinion is not modified with respect to these corrections.

Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting

Opinion on Internal Control. In planning and performing our audit of the financial statements of the
PRIA Fund as of and for the year ended September 30, 2021, in accordance with auditing standards
generally accepted in the United States of America, we considered the fund's internal control over
financial reporting as a basis for designing our audit procedures that are appropriate in the
circumstances for the purpose of expressing an opinion on the financial statements and to comply with
the Office of Management and Budget's audit guidance, but not to express an opinion on the
effectiveness of the fund's internal control. Accordingly, we do not express an opinion on the
effectiveness of the fund's internal control over financial reporting.

Material Weaknesses and Significant Deficiencies. Our consideration of the internal control was for the
limited purpose of expressing an opinion on the fund's financial statements and was not designed to
identify all deficiencies in internal control that might be material weaknesses or significant deficiencies;
therefore, such deficiencies in internal control may exist that were not identified during the course of
our audit. A deficiency in internal control over financial reporting exists when the design or operation of
a control does not allow management or employees, in the normal course of performing their assigned
functions, to prevent or detect and correct misstatements on a timely basis. A material weakness is a
deficiency, or a combination of deficiencies, in internal control over financial reporting, such that there
is a reasonable possibility that a material misstatement of the entity's financial statements will not be
prevented or detected and corrected on a timely basis. A significant deficiency is a deficiency or a
combination of deficiencies in internal control over financial reporting that is less severe than a material
weakness yet important enough to merit attention by those charged with governance.

22-F-0060

2


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Because of inherent limitations in internal control, misstatements, losses, or noncompliance may
nevertheless occur and not be detected.

Comparison of the EPA's Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act Report with
Our Evaluation of Internal Control

Office of Management and Budget Bulletin 21-04 requires us to compare material weaknesses disclosed
during the audit with those material weaknesses reported in the Agency's Federal Managers' Financial
Integrity Act report that relate to the financial statements. We are also required to identify material
weaknesses disclosed by the audit that were not reported in the Agency's report. The Agency's report is
prepared and submitted at the consolidated level, of which the PRIA Fund is a component. Accordingly,
there are no findings to report at the PRIA Fund level.

Report on Compliance with Laws, Regulations, Contracts, and
Grant Agreements

EPA management is responsible for complying with laws, regulations, contracts, and grant agreements
applicable to the Agency and the fund. As part of obtaining reasonable assurance about whether the
fund's financial statements are free of material misstatement, we performed tests of the Agency's
compliance with certain provisions of laws, including those governing the use of budgetary authority,
regulations, contracts, and grant agreements that have a direct effect on the determination of material
amounts and disclosures in the fund's financial statements.

Opinion on Compliance with Laws, Regulations, Contracts, and
Grant Agreements

Providing an opinion on compliance with certain provisions of laws, regulations, contracts, and grant
agreements was not an objective of our audit and, accordingly, we do not express such an opinion. We
did not identify any instances of noncompliance that would result in a material misstatement to the
audited financial statements.

Other Governmental Reporting Requirements

Decision Time Review

PRIA, at 7 U.S.C. § 136w-8, requires that the EPA establish time frames for its review and decision-
making on applications for pesticide registration, known as decision time review periods. PRIA further
requires that the EPA make a schedule of decision review periods for covered pesticide registration
actions and the corresponding registration services publicly available.

PRIA additionally requires that the Office of Inspector General conduct an annual audit of the PRIA
Fund's financial statements, to include an analysis of the PRIA Fund fees collected and the EPA's
compliance with the decision time review periods. Based on our audit, we determined that the Agency
was in compliance with the decision time review periods as required by PRIA.

22-F-0060

3


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Management's Discussion and Analysis

Our audit was conducted for the purpose of forming an opinion on the PRIA Fund financial statements
as a whole. The Management's Discussion and Analysis section is presented for the purpose of providing
additional analysis and is not a required part of the basic financial statements. Such information is
management's responsibility. We obtained information from the fund's management about its methods
for preparing the Management's Discussion and Analysis section, and we reviewed this information for
consistency with the financial statements. Our audit was not designed to express an opinion and,
accordingly, we do not express an opinion on the Management's Discussion and Analysis section. We did
not identify any material inconsistencies between the information presented in the fund's financial
statements and the information presented in the Management's Discussion and Analysis section.

During a previous audit of the PRIA Fund's financial statements—OIG Report No. 22-F-0014, EPA's Fiscal
Years 2020 and 2019 Financial Statements for the Pesticide Registration Fund, issued December 21,
2021—we reported a material weakness where the EPA materially misstated the PRIA Fund's income
and expenses from other appropriations. We also reported a significant deficiency where the EPA needs
to improve its financial statement preparation process.

We recommended that the Agency correct the calculation of the income and expense amounts in the
PRIA Fund's draft financial statements' footnote 10, "Income and Expenses from Other Appropriations,"
and that it document the control activities and procedures for calculating such amounts. The Agency
agreed with our recommendations and completed the corrective actions on December 2, 2021.

We also recommended that the Agency develop a plan to strengthen and improve the preparation and
management review of the financial statements and adjustments. The Agency agreed with our
recommendation and certified completion of the corrective action on January 13, 2022.

In the fund's fiscal years 2021 and 2020 financial statements, management has made progress in
capturing items needed when calculating the income and expenses from other appropriations.
Furthermore, management has also made progress in the preparation and review of its financial
statements and adjustments.

Damon Jackson

Certified Public Accountant

Director, Financial Directorate

Office of Audit

Office of Inspector General

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

August 23, 2022

22-F-0060	4

Prior Audit Coverage

Agency Comments

There are no recommendations in this report, and the Agency had no comments.


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Appendix A

Fiscal Years 2021 and 2020 (Restated) Pesticide
Registration Fund Financial Statements

22-F-0060

5


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Fiscal Years 2021 and 2020 (Restated)
Pesticide Registration Fund Financial Statements



' PROTtC

Produced by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Office of the Chief Financial Officer
Office of the Controller

22-F-0060

6


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Table of Contents

Management's Discussion and Analysis.	,1

Principal Financial Statements	4

Balance Sheet	4

Statement of Net Cost (Restated)	5

Statement of Changes in Net Position (Restated)	6

Statement of Budgetary Resources	7

Notes to Financial Statements	8

Note 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies	8

Note 2. Fund Balance with Treasury (FBWT)	11

Note 3. Accounts Payable	11

Note 4. General Property Plant and Equipment, Net	12

Note 5. Other Liabilities	14

Note 6. Recoveries and Resources Not Available, Statement of Budgetary Resources	15

Note 7. Unobligated Balances Available	15

Note 8. Undelivered Orders at the End of the Period	15

Note 9. Federal Employee Benefits Payable	16

Note 10. Income and Expenses from Other Appropriations	16

Note 11. Intragovernmental Costs and Exchange Revenue (Restated)	17

Note 12. Reconciliation of Net Cost of Operations to Budget (Restated).	17

Note 13. Restatement	19

22-F-0060	7


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Management's Discussion and Analysis

22-F-0060

8


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Under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) and the Federal Food, Drag, and
Cosmetic Act (FFDCA), as amended by the Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA) of 1996, the EPA's
Pesticide Program registers new pesticides and re-evaluates existing pesticides to ensure that they can be
used safely and that levels of residue in food and animal feed are safe (there is a reasonable certainty of no
harm). The Agency must also conclude that, when used in accordance with labeling and common practices,
the product will not generally cause unreasonable adverse effects on the environment.

The Pesticide Registration Improvement Act (PRIA) of 2003 established the Pesticide Registration Fund.
PRIA authorizes the collection of Registration service fees, which are deposited into the Pesticide
Registration Fund and made available for obligation to the extent provided in appropriation acts and are
available without fiscal year limitation.

Pesticide Registration

Under FIFRA and FFDCA pesticides must be registered by the EPA. The passage of PRIA introduced
deadlines for the Agency to complete certain registration actions. EPA expedites the registration of reduced-
risk pesticide uses, which generally pose lower risks to people and the environment. Accelerated pesticide
reviews provide an incentive for industry to develop and register lower risk pesticides, and the availability of
these reduced-risk pesticides provides alternatives to older, potentially more harmful products currently on
the market.

PRIA prescribed the amount of the registration service fee and the corresponding decision review time for
various categories of registration action. The goal is to create a more predictable evaluation process for
affected pesticide registrants and couple the collection of individual fees with specific decision-making
periods. The legislation also promotes shorter decision review periods for reduced-risk pesticide
applications. PRIA 1, effective on March 23, 2004, authorized collection of registration fees through FY
2008. The Pesticide Registration Improvement Renewal Act (PRIA 2), effective on October 1, 2007,
authorized collection of registration fees through FY 2012. 'Hie Pesticide Registration Improvement
Extension Act of 2012 (PRIA 3) was effective on October 1, 2012, authorized collection of registration
fees through FY 2017. The PRIA 3 statutory expiration date of September 30, 2017, was extended
through fiscal year 2018 and part of fiscal year 2019 by legislative language contained in 2018 and 2019
continuing resolutions as well as the 2018 omnibus spending bill. Effective March 8, 2019, the Pesticide
Registration Improvement Extension Act of 2018 (PRIA 4) reauthorized PRIA for five years, through
fiscal year 2023.

For a pending or a new application covered by PRIA to be deemed complete and subject to the decision
review periods, a registrant is required to pay the applicable fee or receive a waiver from the fee. For most
applications, the decision review period starts 21 days after submission of the application, provided that the
fee has been paid, fee waiver granted or in the case of a 75% or 50% fee waiver under PRIA 4, the waiver has
been granted and the remaining fee has been paid. PRIA 4 legislation provides fee waivers for certain
categories of small businesses and minor uses1. Exemption from the requirement to pay a registration service
fee is continued under PRIA 4 for applications solely associated with IR-4 petitions2.

1 Minor use pesticides are those that produce relatively little revenue for their manufacturers, for a variety of reasons. They may be
registered for a seldom seen pest, or for a crop that is not grown by a large number of producers. However, minor crops include
some high revenue fruit, vegetable, and ornamental crops.

2The IR-4 (Interregional Research Project No. 4) program is involved in making sure that pesticides are registered for use on minor
crops. IR-4 helps by conducting research on minor use pesticides, pesticides that would not otherwise be profitable to manufacture.

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

1.

22-F-0060

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Applications from federal and state agencies are also exempt from registration service fees. If the registrant
requests a waiver or reduction of the fee, the decision review period will begin when the Agency grants such
request or in the case of small business fee waivers, no more than 60 days after receipt of the waiver
application. If the Agency determines that a fee is required and the waiver is not granted, the decision review
period starts after the fee is collected.

Applications received prior to October 1, 2007, were covered by PRIA 1. Applications received between
October 1, 2007, and September 30, 2012, were covered by PRIA 2 applications received on or after
October 1, 2012, through March 7, 2019, are covered by PRIA 3. Effective March 8, 2019, the Pesticide
Registration Improvement Extension Act of 2018 (PRIA 4) reauthorized PRIA for five years, through
fiscal year 2023. PRIA 4 contains the same audit provision as PRIA 3. PRIA 4 continues authority
established under PRIA 3 to reject an application if it fails a preliminary technical screen. PRIA 4 modifies
fees for existing categories, creates new fee categories, and in a few cases, amends the category definitions.
PRIA 4 increases the fee categories or types of applications covered by PRIA from 189 to 212 and
continues PRIA 3 set-asides for farm worker protection activities, partnership grants and pesticide safety
education programs. PRIA 4 authorized two 5% fee increases, the first beginning in FY 2020 and the
second beginning in FY 2022.

Highlights and Accomplishments
Registration Financial Perspective

During FY 2021. the Agency's obligations charged against the PRIA Fund for the cost of registration were
S20.8 million and 71.5 work-years. Of this amount. OPP obligated $11.1 million in Personnel Compensation
and Benefits (PC&B).

Appropriated funds are used in addition to registration fee funds. In FY 2021, approximately $12.8
million in appropriated funds were used for pesticide registration activities.

The Pesticide Registration Fund has two types of receipts: fee collections and interest earned on
investments. Of the $20.7 million in FY 2021 net receipts, more than 99.9% were fee collections.

Registration Program Performance Measures

The following measure supports the program's strategic goal: ensuring the safety of chemicals and pollution
prevention.

Measure 1: Average number of days to complete PRIA decisions for new active ingredients

Results: The average decision review time frame for new active ingredient decisions completed in FY
2021 was 852 days; the FY 2021 target was 607 days.

Measure 2: Average number of days exceeding PRIA decision timeframes for new active ingredient
decisions

Results: In FY 2021, the average number of days by which the decision timeframe for completed new
active ingredient actions exceeded the statutory timeframes was 291 days; the FY 2021 target was 263
days.

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

2.

22-F-0060

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Measure 3: Percentage of decisions (registration actions) completed on time (on or before PRIA or
negotiated due date)

Results: In FY 2021, EPA completed 97% of PRIA actions "on-time"; the FY 2021 target was a 99% on-
time completion. Of the 2,556PRIA decisions completed in the fiscal year, 64 were completed after the
original or negotiated due date.

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

0060


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Principal Financial Statements

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA
Balance Sheet
As of September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

2021

2020

ASSETS

Intragovernmental:

Fund Balance With Treasury (Note 2)

Advances and Prepayments
Total Intragovernmental

General Property. Plant and Equipment, Net (Note 4)
Total Assets

16.896
	42

16,938
225

17.163

16,675

16,675

300
16.975

LIABILITIES
Intra governmenta 1:

Accounts Payable (Note 3)	S 137	$ 140

Other Liabilities (Note 5)		82		60

Total Intragovernmental	219	200

With the Public:

Advances from Others and Deferred Revenue	15,364	15,255

Federal Employee Benefits Payable (Note 9)	2,959	3,241

Other Liabilities (Note 5)		917		818

Total Liabilities	19.459	19.514

NET POSITION

Cumulative Res ults of Operations - Funds from Dedicated Collections		(2.296)		(2.539)

Total Net Position	(2,296)	(2,539)

Total Liabilities and Net Position	$	17.163	$	16.975

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

22-F-0060	12


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA
Statement of Net Cost
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020 (Restated)
(Dollars in Thousands)

Restated
2021	2020

COSTS

Gross Costs (Note 11)

Expenses from Other Appropriations (Note 10)

Total Costs
Less:

Earned Revenue (Note 11 and 13) (Restated)

NET COST OF OPERATIONS (Notes 12 and 13) (Restated)

i 20.327 S

18,997

43.767

44.921

64,094

63,918

19.916

17.841

1 44.178 $

46.077

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

22-F-0060

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Statement of Changes in Net Position
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020 (Restated)
(Dollars in Thousands)

2021

Restated
2020

Cumulative Results of Operations:

Net Position - Balance

Budgetary Financing Sources:

Nonexchange Revenue - Securities Investment
Income from Other Appropriations (Note 10 )
Total Budgetary Financing Sources

Other Financing Sources (Non-Exchange)

Imputed Financing Sources
Total Other Financing Sources

Net Cost of Operations (Notes 12 and 13) (Restated)

Net Change

Cum ul ati ve Results of Operations

TOTAL NET POSITION

! (2,539) $

(2,098)

4

125

43.767

44.921

43,771

45,046

650

590

650

590

I (44,178) $

(46,077)

243

(441)

; (2.296) $

(2.539)

; (2.296) $

(2.539)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

22-F-0060

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Statement of Budgetary Resources
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020

(Dollars in Thousands)











2021

2020

BUDGETARY RESOURCES







Unobligated Balance From Prior Year Budget Authority, Net (discretionary)

S

9,696 $

6,426

Appropriations (discretionary)



20.028

19.779

Total Budgetary Resources

$

29.724 $

26.205

STATUS OF BUDGETARY RESOURCES







New Obligations and Upward adjustments (total)

s

21,288 $

17,191

Unobligated Balance, End of Year:







Apportioned, Unexpired Accounts



7.408

7,235

Unapportioned, Unexpired accounts



1.028

1.779

Unobligated Balance, End of Year (total): (Note 7)



8.436

9.014

Total Status of Budgetary Resources

$

29.724 $

26.205

OUTLAYS, NET







Outlays, Net (total) (discretionary)

$

19,807 $

18,655

Distributed Offsetting Receipts (-)



(20.028)

(19.779)

Agency Outlays, Net (discretionary)

s

(221) $

(1.124)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

22-F-0060

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

Note 1. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

A.	Reporting Entities

The EPA was created in 1970 by executive reorganization from various components of other federal agencies
to better marshal and coordinate federal pollution control efforts. The Agency is generally organized around
the media and substances it regulates - air, land, water, waste, pesticides, and toxic substances.

The Pesticide Registration Fund (PRIA) is authorized under the Pesticide Registration Improvement Act of
2003 (which amended the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), and became
effective on March 23, 2004. This Act authorizes the EPA to assess and collect pesticide registration service
fees on applications submitted to register pesticides covered by this Act, as well as assess and collect fees to
register new active ingredients not listed in the Registration Division 2003 Work Plan of the Office of
Pesticide Programs. The Pesticide Registration Improvement Renewal Act (commonly referred to as PRIA
2) extended the authority to collect pesticide registration service fees through FY 2012. PRIA 2 became
effective October 1, 2007. PRIA 2 was reauthorized with the passage of the Pesticide Registration
Improvement Extension Act (referred to as PRIA 3) on September 28, 2012. PRIA 3 became effective
October 1, 2012, and authorized collection of registration fees through FY 2018. PRIA 4 became effective
March 8, 2019 and authorized collection of registration fees through FY 2023. The PRIA Fund is accounted
for under Treasury symbol number 68X5374.

The PRIA fund may charge some administrative costs directly to the fund and charge the remainder of the
administrative costs to Agency-wide appropriations. See Note 10 Income and Expenses from Other
Appropriations for amounts included in Income from Other Appropriations on the Statement of Changes in
Net Position and as Expenses from Other Appropriations on the Statement of Net Cost.

B.	Basis of Presentation

These financial statements have been prepared to report the financial position and results of operations of the
EPA for the Pesticide Registration Fund (PRIA) as required by the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990 and
the Pesticide Registration Improvement Act (PRIA) of 2003. hi the prior years, pesticide registration was
included in the FIFRA financial statements. The reports have been prepared from the books and records of
the EPA in accordance with Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-f 36 Financial Reporting
Requirements, and the EPA's accounting policies which are summarized in this note. These statements are
therefore different from the financial reports also prepared by the EPA pursuant to OMB directives that are
used to monitor and control the EPA's use of budgetary resources. The balances in these reports have been
updated from the EPA consolidated financial statements to reflect the use of FY 2018 cost factors for
calculating imputed costs for Federal civilian benefits programs. These updates impact the Balance Sheet,
Statement of Net Cost, and Statement of Changes in Net Position.

C.	Budgets and Budgetary Accounting

Funding for PRIA is provided by fees collected from industry to offset costs incurred by EPA in carrying out
these programs. Each year, the EPA submits an apportionment request to OMB based on the anticipated
collections of industry fees.

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

8.

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16


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

D.	Basis of Accounting

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) for federal entities is the standard prescribed by the
Federal Accounting Standards Advisory Board (FASAB), which is the official standard-setting body for the
Federal Government and the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). The financial
statements are prepared in accordance with GAAP for federal entities.

Transactions are recorded on an accrual accounting basis and a budgetary basis. Under the accrual method,
revenues are recognized when earned and expenses are recognized when liabilities are incurred, without
regard to receipt or payment of cash. Budgetary accounting facilitates compliance with legal constraints and
controls over the use of federal funds posted in accordance with OMB directives and the U.S. Treasury
regulations. All interfund balances and transactions have been eliminated.

EPA uses a modified matching principle since federal entities recognize unfunded liabilities (without
budgetary resources) in accordance FASAB Statement of Federal Financial Accounting Standards (SFFAS)

No. 5 Accounting for Liabilities of the Federal Government.

E.	Revenues and Other Financing Sources

For FYs 2021 and 2020, PRIA received funding from fees collected from registrants requesting pesticide
registrations. For FYs 2021 and 2020, revenues were recognized from fee collections to the extent that
expenses are incurred during the fiscal year.

F.	Funds with the Treasury

The PRIA fund deposits receipts and processes disbursements through its operating account maintained at the
U.S. Department of the Treasury.

G.	Advances and Prepayments

PRIA advances funds to the EPA's Working Capital Fund to pay for computer, postage, and other
administrative support services.

H.	Investments in U. S. Government Securities

Investments in U. S. government securities are maintained by Treasury and are reported at amortized cost net
of unamortized discounts. Discounts are amortized over the term of the investments and reported as interest
income. PRIA holds the investments to maturity, unless needed to finance operations of the fund. No
provision is made for unrealized gains or losses on these securities because, in the majority of cases, they are
held to maturity.

I.	Property, Plant, and Equipment

General property, plant and equipment for PRIA consists of software in production. Internal use software includes
purchased commercial off-the-shelf software, contractor developed software and software that was internally
developed by Agency employees. In FY 2017, the EPA reviewed its capitalization threshold levels for PP&E.
Hie Agency performed an analysis of the values of software assets and increased the capitalization threshold
from $250 thousand to $5 million to better align with major software acquisition investments. The $5 million
threshold will be applied prospectively to software acquisitions and modifications/enhancements placed into
service after September 30, 2016. Software assets placed into service prior to October 1, 2016 were

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

9.

22-F-0060

17


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

capitalized at the $250 thousand threshold. Internal use software is capitalized at full cost (direct and
indirect) and amortized using the straight-line method over its useful life, not exceeding five years.

J. Liabilities

Liabilities represent the amount of monies or other resources that are more likely than not to be paid by the
Agency as the result of an Agency transaction or event that has already occurred and can be reasonably
estimated. However, no liability can be paid by the Agency without an appropriation or other collections.
Liabilities for which an appropriation has not been enacted are classified as unfunded liabilities and there is
no certainty that the appropriations will be enacted. For PRIA, liabilities are liquidated from fee receipts,
since PRIA receives no appropriation. Fees collected by the Agency are classified as unearned revenue until
expended (see Note 5). Liabilities of the Agency arising from anything other than contracts can be abrogated
by the Government acting in its sovereign capacity.

K. Accrued Unfunded Annual Leave

Annual, sick and other leave is expensed as taken during the fiscal year. Annual leave earned but not taken at
the end of the fiscal year is accrued as an unfunded liability. Accrued unfunded annual leave is included in
the Balance Sheet as a component of "Payroll and Benefits Payable." Sick leave earned but not taken is not
accrued as a liability. It is expensed as it is used.

L. Advances from Others and Deferred Revenue

Fees collected by the PRIA program that have not yet been expended are considered deferred revenue.
Deferred revenue will fluctuate in conjunction with expenses paid from other appropriations and program
expenses (see Note 10).

M. Retirement Plan

There are two primary retirement systems for federal employees. Employees hired prior to January 1. 1987,
may participate in the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS). On January 1, 1987, the Federal Employees
Retirement System (FERS) went into effect pursuant to Public Law 99-335. Most employees hired after
December 31. 1986, are automatically covered by FERS and Social Security. Employees hired prior to
January 1, 1987, elected to either join FERS and Social Security or remain in CSRS. A primary feature of
FERS is that it offers a savings plan to which the Agency automatically contributes one percent of pay and
matches any employee contributions up to an additional four percent of pay. The Agency also contributes the
employer's matching share for Social Security.

With the issuance of SFFAS No. 5, Accounting for Liabilities of the Federal Government, accounting and
reporting standards were established for liabilities relating to the federal employee benefit programs
(Retirement, Health Benefits, and Life Insurance). SFFAS No. 5 requires that the employing agencies
recognize the cost of pensions and other retirement benefits during their employees' active years of service.
SFFAS No. 5 requires that the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), as administrator of the CSRS and
FERS, the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program, and the Federal Employees Group Life Insurance
Program, provide federal agencies with the actuarial cost factors to compute the liability for each program.

N. Offsetting Receipts

Beginning in FY 2007 OMB Circular A-136, Financial Reporting Requirements, requires that the amount of
distributed offsetting receipts reported in the Statement of Budgetary Resources (SBR) should equal the

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

10.

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

amount recorded as offsetting receipts by the Department of the Treasury (Treasury). Pesticide Registration
Fees collected under PRIA are considered to be offsetting receipts by Treasury.

O. Use of Estimates

The preparation of financial statements requires management to make certain estimates and assumptions that
affect reporting amounts of assets, liabilities and the reported amounts of the revenue and expenses during
the period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.

P. Reclassifications and Comparative Figures

Certain reclassifications have been made to the prior year's financial statements to enhance comparability
with the current year's financial statements in accordance with Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Circular No. A-136, Financial Reporting Requirements revised August 20, 2021. As a result, the form and
content of the Balance Sheet has changed to conform with OMB Circular No. A-136.

Note 2. Fund Balance With Treasury (FBWT)

Fund Balance with Treasury as of September 30, 2021 and 2020 consists of the following:

	2021	2020	

Entity Non-Entity	Entity Non-Entity

Assets	Assets	Total	Assets	Assets	Total

Other Fund Types:

PRIA	£ 16.896 $	S 16.896 S 16.675 S	£ 16.675

Total	S 16.896 $	S 16.896 S 16.675 S	S 16.675

Status of Fund Balances:	2021	2020

Unobligated Amounts in Fund Balance:

Available for Obligation	S 7,408	$ 7,235

Unavailable for Obligation	1,028	1,779

Obligated Balance not yet Disbursed	8,460	7,232

Non-Budgetary FBWT		-		429

Total " '	S 16.896	$ 16.675

Note 3. Accounts Payable

The Accounts Payable are current liabilities and consist of the following amounts as of September 30, 2021
and 2020:

2021	2020

Intragovernmental:







Accrued Liabilities

s

137 $

140

Total

s

137 $

140

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

11.

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19


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

Note 4. General Property, Plant and Equipment, Net

General property, plant, and equipment (PP&E) consist of software, real property, EPA-held and contractor-
held personal property, and capital leases.

As of September 30, 2021, General PP&E Cost consisted of the following:

EPA-
Held

Software



Eauipment

(production)

Total

Balance, Beginning of Year
Additions

S 202

78

S 5,050 s

i 5,252

78

Balance, End of Year

S 280

S 5.050 3

> 5.330

As of September 30, 2021, General PP&E Accumulated Depreciation consisted of the following:





EPA-
Held
Equipment

Software
(production)

Total

Balance, Beginning of Year

Depreciation Expense

$ 1

54

$ 4,951 3
99

i 4,952

153

Balance, End of Year

$ 55

$ 5,050 3

; 5,105

As of September 30, 2021, General PP&E, Net consisted of the follow ing:







EPA-
Held
Eauinment

Software
(production)

Total

Balance, End of Year, Net

S 225

$ - 3

> 225

As of September 30, 2020, General PP&E Cost consisted of the following:







EPA-
Held
Eauinment

Software
(production)

Total

Balance, Beginning of Year
Additions

S

202

$ 5,050 3

> 5,050

202

Balance, End of Year

S 202

S 5.050 3

> 5.252

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

12.

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20


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

As of September 30, 2020, General PP&E Accumulated Depreciation consisted of the following:

EPA-

Total
$ 4,936

	16

$ 4.952

Balance, Beginning of Year

Depreciation Expense
Balance, End of Year

Held	Software
Equipment (production')

$ -	S 4,936

	1 	15

$	1	S 4.951

As of September 30, 2020, General PP&E, Net consisted of the following:

EPA-

Held	Software

Equipment (production) Total
Balance, End of Year, Net	S 201 $	99 S 300

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

13.

22-F-0060

21


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

Note 5. Other Liabilities

Other Liabilities consist of the following as of September 30. 2021:

Covered by
Budgetary
Resources

Not Covered
by Budgetary
Resources

Current

Employer Contributions & Payroll Taxes
Total Intragovernmental

Other Liabilities - Non-Federal
Current

Other Accrued Liabilities
Accrued Funded Payroll and Benefits
Total Non-Federal

Total

$ 82

S

$ 82

$ 82

S

$ 82

$ 573

s

$ 573

344

-

344

$ 917

s

$ 917

Other Liabilities consist of the following as of September 30, 2020:

Current

Employer Contributions & Payroll Taxes
Total Intragovernmental

Covered by-
Budgetary
Resources

S	60

S	60

Not Covered

by

Resources

Total

60
60

Other Liabilities - Non-Federal
Current

Other Accrued Liabilities
Accrued Funded Payroll and Benefits
Withholding Payable
Total Non-Federal

541 S
272
	5

818 $

541

272

	5

818

At various periods throughout FY 2021 and FY 2020 employees with their associated payroll costs were
transferred from PRIA to the Environmental Programs and Management (EPM) appropriation. These
employees were transferred to keep PRIA's obligations and disbursements within budgetary limits.

This process has led to variations between the year-end liabilities of FYs 2021 and 2020. The liabilities
covered by budgetary resources (both intragovernmental and non-Federal) represent unpaid payroll and
benefits at year-end.

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

14.

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22


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

Note 6. Recoveries and Resources Not Available, Statement of Budgetary Resources

Recoveries of Prior Year Obligations. Temporarily Not Available, and Permanently Not Available on the Statement of
Budgetary Resources consist of the following amounts as of September 30, 2021 and 2020:

2021	2020

Unobligated Balance Brought Forward, Oct 1.	S 9.014 S 6.216

Adjustments to Budgetary Resources Made During the Current Year

Downward Adjustments of Prior Year Undelivered Orders	734	404

Permanent Reduction Prior Year Balances	-	(257)

Other Adjustments 	(52)		63

Total	682	210

Unobligated Balance from Prior Year Budget Authority, Net

(discretionary and mandatory) $	9.696	$	6.426

Temporarily Not Available - Rescinded Authority	$	(833) $	(833)

Note 7. Unobligated Balances Available

Unexpired unobligated balances are available to be apportioned by the OMB for new obligations at the
beginning of the following fiscal year. The expired unobligated balances are only available for upward
adjustments of existing obligations.

The unobligated balances available consist of the following as of September 30, 2021 and 2020:

2021	2020

Unexpired Unobligated Balance	S 8,436 $ 9,014

Expired Unobligated Balance		-		-

Total	$ 8.436 $ 9.014

Note 8. Undelivered Orders at the End of the Period

Undelivered orders consist of the following as of September 30, 2021 and 2020:

2021	2020

Intra governmental:

Unpaid Undelivered Orders	S (1,693)	$ (1.452)

Paid Undelivered Orders	42
With the public:

Unpaid Undelivered Orders		8.129		7.449

Total	S 6.478	$ 5.997

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

15.

22-F-0060

23


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

Note 9. Federal Employee Benefits Payable

Payroll and benefits payable to the EPA employees for the years September 30, 2021 and 2020 consist of the
following:

FY 2021 Federal Employee Benefits Payable

Employer Contributions Payable - Thrift Savings Plan
Total - Current

Accrued Unfunded Annual Leave
Total - Non-Current

Total

Covered by
Budgetary-
Resources

Not Covered
by Budgetary
Resources

Total

; 40

s - $

40

40

-

40

.

2.919

2.919

-

2,919

2,919

; 40

S 2,919 $

2,959

FY 2020 Federal Employee Benefits Payable

Employer Contributions Payable - Thrift Savings Plan
Total - Current

Accrued Unfunded Annual Leave
Total - Non-Current

Total

Covered by
Budgetary
Resources

Not Covered
by Budgetary
Resources

Total

; 27

s - $

27

27

-

27

_

3.214

3.214

-

3,214

3,214

; 27

$ 3.214 $

3.241

Note 10. Income and Expenses from Other Appropriations

The Statement of Net Cost reports the program costs that include the full cost of the program outputs and
consist of the direct costs and all other costs that can be directly traced, assigned on a cause and effect basis,
or reasonably allocated to program outputs.

During FYs 2021 and 2020, the EPA had two appropriations which funded a variety of programmatic and
non-programmatic activities across the Agency, subject to statutory requirements. The EPM appropriation
was created to fund personnel compensation and benefits, travel, procurement, and contract activities.

As illustrated below there is no impact on EPA's Statement of Changes in Net Position.

2021	2020

Income from Other Appropriations

S 43,767 S

44,921

Expenses from Other Appropriations

43.767

44.921

Net Effect

S - $

-

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

16.

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24


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

Note 11. Exchange Revenues, Statement of Net Cost (Restated)

Restated
2021	2020

Costs:





Intragovernmental

S 4,483 $

4,490

With the Public

15,844

14,507

Expenses from Other Appropriations

43.767

44.921

Total Costs

64,094

63.918

Revenue:





With the Public (Restated)

19.916

17.841

Total Revenue

19,916

17,841

Net Cost of Operations:	$ 44.178 S	46.077

Intragovernmental costs relate to the source of the goods or services not the classification of the related
revenue.

Note 12. Reconciliation of Net Cost of Operations to Net Outlays (Restated)

Budgetary and financial accounting information differ. Budgetary accounting is used for planning and control
purposes and relates to both the receipt and use of cash, as well as reporting the federal deficit. Financial accounting is
intended to provide a picture of the government's financial operations and financial position, so it presents
information on an accrual basis. The accrual basis includes information about costs arising from the consumption of
assets and the incurrence of liabilities. The reconciliation of net outlays, presented on a budgetary basis, and the net
cost, presented on an accrual basis, provides an explanation of the relationship between budgetary and financial
accounting information.

The reconciliation serves not only to identify costs paid for in the past and those that will be paid in the future, but
also to assure integrity between budgetary and financial accounting. The reconciliation explains the relationship
between the net cost of operations and net outlays by presenting components of net cost that are not part of net outlays
(e.g. depreciation and amortization expenses of assets previously capitalized, change in asset/ liabilities), components
of net outlays that are not part of net cost (e.g. acquisition of capital assets), other temporary timing difference (e.g.
prior period adjustments due to correction of errors). The analysis below illustrates this reconciliation by listing the
key differences between net cost and net outlays.

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

17.

22-F-0060

25


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

Intra-
governmental

With the
Public

Total 2021

NET COST $

4,483 $

39,695 $

44,178

Components of Net Cost That Are Not Part of Net Outlays:
Property. Plant and Equipment Depreciation
Cost Capitalization Offset
Income from Other appropriations

-

153
(78)
(43,767)

153
(78)
(43,767)

Increase/(Decrease) in Assets:
Other Assets

42

-

42

(Increase)/Decrease in Liabilities:

Accounts Payable

Federal Employee Benefits Payable

Other Liabilities

20

(296)
33

20
(296)
33

Other Financing Sources:
Other Imputed Financing

(649*



(649)

Total Components of Net Cost That Are Not Part of Net
Outlays

(587)

(43,955)

(44,542)

Components of Net Outlays That Are Not Part of Net Cost:
Appropriated Receipts for Trust Fund/Special Funds
Distributed Offsetting Receipts
Custodial/Non-exchange revenue

(4)

20.028
(20,028)

20.028
(20.028)
(4)

Total Components of Net Outlays That Are Not Part of Net
Cost

(4)

-

(4)

Other Temporary Timing Differences

-

147

147

NET OUTLAYS $

3.892 $

(4.113) $

(221)

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

18.

22-F-0060

26


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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
PRIA

Notes to the Financial Statements
For the Fiscal Years Ended September 30, 2021 and 2020
(Dollars in Thousands)

Intra-	With the Restated

governmental Public Total 2020

NET COST	$	4,490 $ 41,587 $ 46,077

Components of Net Cost That Are Not Part of Net Outlays:

(Restated)

Property. Plant and Equipment Depreciation	-	(225)	(225)

Other "	-	(44,510) (44,510)

Increase/(Decrease) in Assets:

Other Assets	(17)	-	(17)

(Increase)/Decrease in Liabilities:

Accounts Payable
Payroll and Benefits Payable
Other Liabilities

(61)	313	252

(432)	(432)

54	(1,912)	(1,858)

Other Financing Sources:

Federal Employee Retirement Benefit Costs Paid by OPM and

(550)

-

(550)

Imputed to the Agency







Other Imputed Financing

(40)

-

(40)

Total Components of Net Cost That Are Not Part of Net







Outlays

3,876

(5,179)

(t,303)

Other Temporary Timing Differences (Restated)

-

179

179

NET OUTLAYS $

3.876 $

(5.0001 $

(1.124)

Note 13. Restatement

During FY 2021 EPA determined that Transfers In/Out was materially mistated in FY 2020 as the line should
have no balance (netting to zero). Statement of Changes in Net Position - Transfers In/Out was overstated by
S389 thousand Statement on Net Cost - Earned Revenue understated by $389 thousand.

The change impacts the FY 2020 Earned Revenue on the Statement of Net Cost and Transfers In/Out on the
Statement of Changes in Net Postition.

Previously	Restated

Reported Restatement Amount

Earned Revenue - Statement of Net Cost
Net Cost of Operations - Statement of Net Cost

17,452
46.466

389
(389)

17.841
46.077

Transfers In/Out - Statement of Changes in Net Position

389

(389) $

EPA's FY 2021 Annual PRIA Financial Statements

19.

22-F-0060

27


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Appendix B

Distribution

The Administrator

Deputy Administrator

Chief of Staff, Office of the Administrator

Deputy Chief of Staff, Office of the Administrator

Chief Financial Officer

Agency Follow-Up Coordinator

General Counsel

Assistant Administrator for Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention
Associate Administrator for Congressional and Intergovernmental Relations
Associate Administrator for Public Affairs
Deputy Chief Financial Officer
Associate Chief Financial Officer

Deputy Assistant Administrator for Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention

Deputy Assistant Administrator for Management, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Pesticide Programs, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution
Prevention

Special Assistant, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention

Director, Office of Pesticide Programs, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention

Director, Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention

Director, Information Technology and Resources Management Division, Office of Program Support,

Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention
Controller
Deputy Controller

Director, Office of Continuous Improvement, Office of the Chief Financial Officer
Director, Office of Budget, Office of the Chief Financial Officer

Director, Office of Planning, Analysis and Accountability, Office of the Chief Financial Officer

Director, Office of Resource and Information Management, Office of the Chief Financial Officer

Director, Office of Technology Solutions, Office of the Chief Financial Officer

Director, Accounting and Cost Analysis Division, Office of the Controller

Director, Policy, Training, and Accountability Division, Office of the Controller

Deputy Director, Office of Budget, Office of the Chief Financial Officer

Deputy Director, Office of Technology Solutions, Office of the Chief Financial Officer

Chief, Management, Integrity, and Accountability Branch; Policy, Training, and Accountability Division,

Office of the Chief Financial Officer
Director, Research Triangle Park Finance Center, Office of the Chief Financial Officer
Director, Cincinnati Finance Center, Office of the Chief Financial Officer
Audit Follow-Up Coordinator, Office of the Administrator
Audit Follow-Up Coordinator, Office of the Chief Financial Officer
Senior Audit Advisor, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention
Audit Liaison, Office of Budget, Office of the Chief Financial Officer
Audit Liaison, Office of the Controller

Audit Liaison, Office of Technology Solutions, Office of the Chief Financial Officer

22-F-0060

28


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Audit Follow-Up Coordinator, Office of Pesticide Programs, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution
Prevention

Audit Follow-Up Coordinator, Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics, Office of Chemical Safety and

Pollution Prevention
Audit Follow-Up Coordinators, Regions 1-10

22-F-0060


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